appale
10 Mbps
It is desirable to have a higher Mbps in almost all cases. Mbps = Mega bits per second. It describes the throughput (or bandwidth) or data through a network interface.
You can't ! MHz or Megahertz is a measurement of frequency - mbps or mega-bits per second is a measurement of data transfer speed.
An OC-3 (Optical Carrier Level 3) line has a data rate of 155.52 Mbps (megabits per second). To convert this to megabytes, divide by 8 (since there are 8 bits in a byte), resulting in approximately 19.44 MBps (megabytes per second). Therefore, an OC-3 can transmit about 19.44 megabytes of data each second.
FDDI
Ethernet LANs have transmission rates of 10 Mbps, 100 Mbps, 1 Gbps and 10 Gbps For an X Mbps Ethernet (where X = 10, 100, 1,000 or 10,000), a user can continuously transmit at the rate X Mbps if that user is the only person sending data. If there are more than one active user, then each user cannot continuously transmit at X Mbps.
Gbps (Gigabits per second) is greater than Mbps (Megabits per second). Specifically, 1 Gbps equals 1,000 Mbps, meaning that Gbps can transmit data at a rate 1,000 times faster than Mbps. Therefore, when comparing the two, Gbps represents a higher speed of data transfer.
The number of bits a processor can transmit at a given time is determined by its word size, which is typically expressed in bits (e.g., 32-bit, 64-bit). This word size indicates the amount of data the processor can handle in a single operation, affecting its performance and the amount of memory it can directly address. For instance, a 64-bit processor can transmit 64 bits of data simultaneously.
Serial ports transmit data one bit at a time, which is why they are becoming obsolete.
the MBPs is the speed (mega bits per second) and the enterprise wan means enterprise wide area network what is a type of protocol that data bits use mainly in commercial places.
I have this same question and don't know it, please answer.
10 mbps ethernet uses Manchester encoding where each symbol is represented by 2 bit sequence. Hence the bits/symbol is 2. Since data rate = bits/symbol x symbol/seconds, symbols/seconds = baud rate = 5 mega baudWhat_is_the_baud_rate_of_the_standard_10-Mbps_Ethernet