this would be called virtual local area connection or a vlan
VLANs.
A hub contains a single collision domain and a single broadcast domain, regardless of the number of ports on the hub.
A broadcast storm is what occurs when the number of broadcasts on a broadcast domain reaches a certain level that causes the network to shut down for useful traffic entirely.
You can't eliminate collision in a broadcasting domain. What you can do is to increase the number of collision domain within a broadcasting domain by using more switches. this will improve your network traffic because the more the collision domain, the better is your network in terms of data transmission performance.
All VLANs that are configured on this switch will be sent to all other switches in the same VTP domain. Adding this switch to the network will cause no disruption in the VTP domain operations if the rest of the switches in the same domain have a higher configuration revision number.
Three VTP parameters that must be identical on all switches to participate in the same VTP domain include domain name, domain password, and version number. VTP stands for VLAN Trunk Protocol. The answer can be found at http://www.ccna4u.org/2011/06/ccna-3-chapter-4-2011-v4-0-answers-100.html
Lan switches eliminate collision domain. A single collision domain in a network would mean half duplex as it can only send or receive at one time. each port of a switch is considered a collision domain in itself. so more the number of collision domain , better for the network.
route r
Select the correct VTP mode and version. Configure the switch with the name of the new management domain. Verify that the switch has a lower configuration revision number than the other switches in the new domain.
Select the correct VTP mode and version. Configure the switch with the name of the new management domain. Verify that the switch has a lower configuration revision number than the other switches in the new domain.
In traditional inter-VLAN routing, bandwidth is typically limited by the routing device's capacity and the physical connection between switches and routers. Each VLAN operates as a separate broadcast domain, and routing between them requires the router to process traffic, which can create a bottleneck if the router or interconnecting link is not adequately provisioned. The overall bandwidth can also be influenced by the type of routing (e.g., software vs. hardware) and the number of VLANs being routed simultaneously. Ensuring sufficient bandwidth often involves using faster routers or Layer 3 switches to manage inter-VLAN traffic efficiently.
A domain number is odd nnumbers.