Been answered already. 10 megabits/sec.
Coax cable is OK for R.F. up to several gigahertz, over medium to short runs. For data, we went to twisted-pair with 100 megabit Ethernet, and twisted-pair is now used in 10 gigabit Ethernet. So... using Nyquist, you can probably use coax cable up to gigabit speeds over medium-short distances, but I'm not aware of anyone doing it. Maybe try a google search.
The maximum speed Ethernet of mm fiber has a transmission speed of 100 Mbit/s. The Ethernet mm fiber increases the speed from 10 to 100 megabits per second.
There were 3 methods of using ethernet. At this point only the hub with cat5 wiring is being used. The two older methods were a. use of a very thick coax cable with each station employing a tranceiver and a tap into the coax. and b. thinner coax cables with BNC connectors daisy chained from station to station. Called 10base2. So this is an obselete 10M ethernet network.
1000Base T Networks
csma
Been answered already. 10 megabits/sec.
Coax cable is OK for R.F. up to several gigahertz, over medium to short runs. For data, we went to twisted-pair with 100 megabit Ethernet, and twisted-pair is now used in 10 gigabit Ethernet. So... using Nyquist, you can probably use coax cable up to gigabit speeds over medium-short distances, but I'm not aware of anyone doing it. Maybe try a google search.
802.11g is a wireless standard, and not a cable. However the max speed at which 802.11g can operate at is 54mbit/s.
The maximum speed Ethernet of mm fiber has a transmission speed of 100 Mbit/s. The Ethernet mm fiber increases the speed from 10 to 100 megabits per second.
Depends on the coax type - thinnet coax is 185 meters per segment, thicknet is 500 meters
skittles
Coax has a better security protection because it's usually shielded. Also range for Coax is for thinnet about 175 meters for thicknet about 400 meters.
It's the coax cable used for Thick Ethernet.
185 m
500m, for 10Base5 thicknet - probably no installations left. For 10base2 thinnet, it's around 185 m - maybe some that have not moved on to twisted-pair of some kind..
Dont ask me cuz i dont know im just realy stupid
Cat5 is rated for 10Mbit operation. Cat5e rated for 100Mbit, and Cat6 rated for 1000Mbit