No a bridge will transmit all network protocols to all ports, without restriction; thus the term "Bridge." A Router in true bridge mode will do the same, unless you implement some form of route management (managed bridge / router).
No, a post office box does not work on the principle of a Wheatstone bridge. A post office box is a secured physical container used for receiving mail, while a Wheatstone bridge is an electrical circuit used to measure unknown resistances by balancing two legs of a bridge circuit. The two concepts operate in entirely different domains—postal services and electrical engineering, respectively.
Domains inside the magnetic
Bridge mode allows to connect to geographically separate piece of the same network together. For instance you have one piece of the network in one building and another one in another building. You can't use a cable to connect them together. In such situation you might have to use a bridge.
collision resolution methods
The West Gate Bridge is a cable-stayed bridge.
A bridge typically creates separate collision domains within the same broadcast domain. If you take a bridge with 2 ports, each port connects to a LAN segment that is in its own collision domain. Therefore, for a 2 port bridge you will get 2 different collision domains.
Bridges, Switches and Routers will all separate collision domains.
Network+ Guide to Networks answer: Bridge, Switch, Router
Not only do bridges and switches separate collision domains but routers also perform this task.
in my opinion there is no any collision domain in the router......but switch has collision domains for each interfaces & hub has one collision domain
Like a switch, a router places nodes that are connected to it in separate collision domains.
On shared-media networks (i.e. hubs or pure ethernets), routers break up broadcast domains and bridges break up collision domains. Routers also break up collision domains. On switched networks, routers break up broadcast domains, and every switch port is its own separate collision domain.
For any amount of clients connected to a hub you will get a total of 1 collision domain. A hub is a device that simply repeats all of the signals from the ports and does not separate clients into separate collision domains.
To determine the number of collision and broadcast domains in a network topology, one must analyze the devices involved. Each switch creates separate collision domains for each connected device, while a router or Layer 3 switch creates separate broadcast domains. Without a specific topology diagram or description, it's impossible to provide an exact count; however, generally, each switch adds collision domains, and each VLAN or router adds a broadcast domain.
No
Bridge is a interface between two or more separate collision domains (limits broadcast to devices connected onto that port only). While Gateway is exit or entrance point to a network and performs changes in protocols if required for e.g. DSL Broadband router connection.gateway may have protocol translators but bridge can not.
Hubs are not collision domains but a networking device. Hubs have single collision domain that makes them very undesirable for modern networks.