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^ What the hell kind of answer is that? :P
UTP stands for Un-shielded Twisted Pair, and it is these twists that help to avoid crosstalk.
UltraDMA/66 requires a special ribbon cable with extra wires (80 wire) to cut down on crosstalk
C. Crosstalk The answer is also False, from the Network + Guide to networks 5th edition.
the magnetic field around the adjacent pairs of wire
You can determine how strong your cable is through cable attachments by finding a weight load guideline online. It shows if the cable attachment is strong enough to support the cable.
Straight through ethernet cable (CAT 5/5e/6)
designing a cable infrastructure to avoid crosstalk interference
Don't run too much wire together in a bundle. You can also go with STP, which is Shielded Twisted Pair and that does not have much crosstalk. There are pipes you can buy where you run cable through them that are also suppose to help.
Crosstalk
Near-end crosstalk (NEXT)
crosstalk
unshielded twisted pair (utp)
To minimize crosstalk
Crosstalk
The plastic core keeps the twisted pairs separated allowing less crosstalk than CAT-5 cable.
Alien Crosstalk (AXT) As the signal rate increases in a cable, this form of crosstalk becomes more important. In Fact, this is a major source of interference, and a limiting factor, for running 10GBase-T (10Gbps) over UTP cabling.
C. Crosstalk The answer is also False, from the Network + Guide to networks 5th edition.
UltraDMA/66 requires a special ribbon cable with extra wires (80 wire) to cut down on crosstalk