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10BaseT is an Ethernet cabling standard. 10BaseT devices can transfer data at a rate of up to 10 Mbps, and use twisted pairs of wires in their Ethernet cabling, as opposed to a coaxial cable. If you see wiring with an RJ-45 plug on the end, you probably have a 10BaseT or backwards-compatible product (such as 100BaseT or 1000BaseT).
Terminator
The Network Layer
100 meters
It is a Network Interface Card that connects 10BaseT Networks together A 10BaseT Cable is an Ethernet Cable consisting of 4 pairs of wires 2 for transmitting and 2 for receiving
rg6
The requirements for a 10Base2 network: RG58u Coaxial cable T-connectors BNC's Terminators Ground, usually a ground chain Internetworking with Cisco and Microsoft Technologies pg. 226 and 227
10BaseT is another name for co-axial cable. It has a maximum cable length of 185 meters or 607 ft.
The problem is in the mechanism which is used to connect computers. If you use shared LAN (hubs) it means that if you have 10BaseT connection it will shared among all connected computers. Thus you have 10 Mbps available for all computers together. When you are using 10BaseT switched, it means that each computer in your network will have a separate connection of 10 Mbps.
UTP most commonly used network cableCat 5 and Cat 6 network cables (also called 10BaseT) use an RJ-45 connector. Older thinwire ethernet (10Base2) uses BNC coaxial connect. Original thickwire ethernet used a special thicker cable with a proprietary AUI connector. The old IBM Token Ring system also used its own special cabling and connectors.
UTP most commonly used network cableCat 5 and Cat 6 network cables (also called 10BaseT) use an RJ-45 connector. Older thinwire ethernet (10Base2) uses BNC coaxial connect. Original thickwire ethernet used a special thicker cable with a proprietary AUI connector. The old IBM Token Ring system also used its own special cabling and connectors.
Thinnet 10BASE2 cable