It would be 10Base-ER. It has a maximum rang of 40 Kilometers witch is 24.4 miles.
funformobile.com is similar. Not nearly as good..but similar.
Folguntur I believe it's called it's nearly directly beneath solitude on the map.
Conventional DRAM, of the type that has been used in PCs since the original IBM PC days, is said to be asynchronous. This refers to the fact that the memory is not synchronized to the system clock. A memory access is begun, and a certain period of time later the memory value appears on the bus. The signals are not coordinated with the system clock at all, as described in the section discussing memory access. Asynchronous memory works fine in lower-speed memory bus systems but is not nearly as suitable for use in high-speed (>66 MHz) memory systems. A newer type of DRAM, called "synchronous DRAM" or "SDRAM", is synchronized to the system clock; all signals are tied to the clock so timing is much tighter and better controlled. This type of memory is much faster than asynchronous DRAM and can be used to improve the performance of the system. It is more suitable to the higher-speed memory systems of the newest PCs.
In 2015, nearly everyone in a first-world country uses the internet in some form daily.
Always. Including casual conversations with friends. Deciding where to eat dinner or what movie to see is nearly impossible without the rules of order.
10GBase-ER
It would be 10Base-ER. It has a maximum rang of 40 Kilometers witch is 24.4 miles.
As you've not listed any of the 10Gbit protocols, we can't help. Try looking up Wikipedia for your answer.
10GBase-ER
No, the farthest galaxies from the Milky way are nearly 100000000000000 light years away.
Scheduled maintenance can be a problem; you can't just drive up to the mountain peak to check on things. Bandwidth can also be an issue; radio signals don't carry nearly as much information as a fiber optic, or even an ethernet wire.
-15
Thyroid
Data Transceiver
The closest (DX Cnc) is 11.8 lightyears away. The farthest is nearly 4000 lightyears away.
It appears to. Radiation has travelled from nearly the farthest visible stars. There seems no reason to expect it to fade out, at least from open space.
nearly = fast nearly = beinahe nearly = nahezu nearly = gleich nearly = bald