IEEE 802.3z
802.3 is the IEEE standard for Ethernet devices and data managment
The standard which is considered to be the Ethernet standard is the 802.3az standard. The 100VG-AnyLAN or 802.12 has also become a common Ethernet standard.
It's IEEE 802.3 for Ethernet and IEEE 802.11 for Wireless LANs.
802.1 Actually, I think the answer is 802.3.
The standard for fiber-optic Ethernet transmittion is 802.3ae
The standard for fiber-optic Ethernet transmittion is 802.3ae
no
logical link control sublayer
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.
It's IEEE 802.3 for Ethernet and IEEE 802.11 for Wireless LANs.
No. Ethernet and token ring have now become standards. However, the access method and the standard are not always the same. Ethernet is based on IEEE 802.3 standards, but is not exactly the same as IEEE 802.3. Some vendors' IEEE 802.3 equipment will not work with ethernet. Token ring and 802.5 are the same, despite token ring's origins as an IBM proprietary standard. Non-IBM vendors can provide 802.5 equipment that will work with IBM token rings, provided the equipment follows 802.5 standards
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)