BNC Connector
A T-connector was used in a thinnet 10base2 coaxial bus network.
BNC
BNC connecter
A thin coaxial cable that is used as a connector is also called a thinnet. It is popular in linear bus networks.
All the ends of a thinnet segment should be terminated with a 50-ohm "terminator". Refer: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thinnet
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No. If you have your own wireless network at home, you do not need the USB connector.
Computers connect to the Internet via a network interface card (NIC) or wireless LAN adapter (WiFi adapter). Historically, computers could also connect to the Internet via a built-in modem for use with telephone lines.
A 50 Ohm Terminator is used at each end of the network to prevent signal reflections.
Local Area Network Cable usually associate with a bus topology network. In a Bus topology network simple LAN cables are used with LAN Hubs ( i.e. having a collection of LAN ports ) which in turn connect many systems with the server systems. LAN cables are available in various length ranging from 1meter onwards.
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