This is an abbreviation for gigabaud; a giga prefix is equivalent to one thousand million and baud is measure using in information theory and datacomms and indicates symbols per second. So 1 gigabaud is one thousand million symbols per second.
Well, 1000Mbps equates to 1Gbps. So your answer is the 1Gbps, which is incredibly fast.
No
Fiber optic, Twisted-pair
10baseT - 10Mbps 100BaseT - 100Mbps GigE - 1000Mbps or 1Gbps 10GigE - 10000Mbps or 10Gbps
RJ-45 uses twisted part of different categories. The most common is CAT5E (100MHz, up to 1Gbps when all 4 pairs are used) and CAT6 (250MHz, native 1Gbps). There is a newer standard CAT6A that is even faster.
802.11n is rated for a maximum bandwidth of 135Mbps and Gigabit Ethernet (as the name implies) is rated for 1Gbps (or 1000Mbps).
CAT5 or CAT6. CAT6 is becoming the standard because it is rated for 1Gbps and faster speeds.
yes , indeed.Standard cable have 100 mbs speed so you need a special one as well as an one gbps ethernet card
Most serial interfaces use a default bandwidth value of 1.544mbps in EIGRP. Selvan S Chennai
NEXT (Near-End Crosstalk) and FEXT (Far-End Crosstalk) are interference issues that occur in twisted pair cabling, particularly impacting 1Gbps Ethernet links. NEXT arises when signals from adjacent wires interfere with each other at the transmitting end, while FEXT occurs at the receiving end. Both types of crosstalk can degrade signal quality and lead to increased bit error rates, which can ultimately affect the performance and reliability of high-speed data transmission. Proper cable design, shielding, and installation practices are essential to mitigate these crosstalk issues.
Well giga = 1000 mega. So I would say 100 seconds? Simple math?