No. It is the Data Link layer that IEEE has divided into two sublayers. The Data Link layers are Logical Link Control and Media Access Control.
the network layer --> check your question. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ That is totally not the right answer, how about you actually read the book for the course. It is the data link layer that does encapsulation. I agree - its the Data Link Layer which encapsulates the Network layer...NOT the Network Layer.
802.3 is the IEEE standard for Ethernet devices and data managment
IEEE 802.11B is 2.4GHz, but with a maximum of only 11Mbps. IEEE 802.11G is in the 2.4GHz range, with a top speed of 54Mbps.
provides improved range permits increased data rates
MAC addresses are formed according to the rules of one of three numbering name spaces managed by the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE)
Logical link control sublayer and media access control sublayer
Logical Link Control (LLC) Media Access Control (MAC)
It is divided into LLC (IEEE 802.2) and MAC (IEEE 802.3) layers.The LLC is used to identify the upper layer protocol from the received data.The MAC layer is used to identify the particular host on the destination network.
IEEE 802.3 is the standard for Ethernet LAN. It is a collection of IEEE standards for physical layer and Data link layer's MAC sublayer. According to these standards, the Ethernet LAN card works. IEEE 802.4 is a Token Bus standard which was standardised by IEEE. It grants the Bus physical topology to use token messages to access physical layer.
the network layer --> check your question. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ That is totally not the right answer, how about you actually read the book for the course. It is the data link layer that does encapsulation. I agree - its the Data Link Layer which encapsulates the Network layer...NOT the Network Layer.
A designation give to a type of equipment. This was at one time a specific piece of equipment; it is now generic in meaning. It is a piece of telecommunications equipment which multiplexes (combines) 28 DS-l signals into a single DS-3 signal, commonly used for concentrating traffic for economy of transmission. MAC1. The acronym for Media Access Control. The lower of the two sublayers of the data link layer defined by the IEEE. The MAC sublayer handles access to shared media, such as whether token passing or contention will be used. See also data-link layer and LLC. The MAC contains the standardized data link layer address that is required for every port or device that connects to a LAN. Other devices in the network use these addresses to locate specific ports in the network and to create and update routing tables and data structures. MAC addresses are 6 bytes long and are controlled by the IEEE. Also known as a hardware address, MAC layer address, and physical address. Compare with network address. See also application layer, network layer, physical layer, PQ, presentation layer, session layer, and transport layer.
All 802.x map to 1. Data Link 2. Physical layer in OSI model.
layer 7- Application layer layer 6- Presentation layer layer 5- Session layer layer 4-Transport layer layer 3-Network layer layer 2- Data Link layer layer 1- Physical layer
Mac & llc
A project that obeys the rules of IEEE organisation is called IEEE project.
It's IEEE 802.3 for Ethernet and IEEE 802.11 for Wireless LANs.
It's IEEE 802.3 for Ethernet and IEEE 802.11 for Wireless LANs.