Which Segmentation of a data stream happens at which layer of the osi odel?
Segmentation of data happens at transport layer. Because transport layer is responsible for successful transportation of data through out the network.
What is the relationship between a sub network and a node?
Whats is the relationship between a sub network a node?
Did Paul Baran invent packet switched networks?
Paul baran was one of the three inventors of packet-switched networks, along with Donald Davies and Leonard Kleinrock.
Compare the osi model and tcp-ip model and their associative protocols?
The OSI model encompasses all of the TCP/IP sub-protocols plus several other protocols that are not part of TCP/IP. These would include IPX/SPX, NetBEUI, Appletalk, and other proprietary protocols that are not part of the TCP/IP model.
Does smtp protocol support file sharing?
its for email
you could email a file and therefor share it with a friend.
so yes... but that wont score you any marks in an exam.
Yes, fiber optics work with light pulses rather that electrical charges. One of the main benefits are that there is no EMI(electromagnetic interference) since magnitism does not affect light. Thus there is no problem with laying electrical cables with fiber optic cables.
How do you find your web proxy IP and Port in Command window?
You go to command and type in ip config you should see everything to do with your ip there
How do get the subnet mask of an ip?
Because the network may be segmented, the only certain way to know is to ask the manager of your network.
How do you connect two sepaerate computers using one router?
its so simple...connect them to the RJ45 port of the router and see that the port blinks.this indicates that they r up and running
How many usable host are available given a Class C IP address with the default subnet mask?
with the default subnet mask, the number of clients in a class A network is:
16,777,214
Conexant is a company that manufactures a number of technology items including dial-up modems. Dial-up modems can be used to connect a computer to the internet via phone line (albeit at very slow speeds compared to broadband modems). Dial-up modems also allow one to use their computer as a fax machine.
Can a single MAC address map to multiple IP addresses?
In Windows, yes, but it must be done manually.
What is the difference between a tact switch and a tactile switch?
Tactile (tact) switches are momentary action on/off switches. This page is a comparison of three types of tact switch which could be used in the TB-303. This discussion applies directly to the switches used in the TR-606, and more generally to stem-less versions of the same kinds of switches, as used in the TR-808 and JP-8. For more discussion of those switches, and for details of how to modify the Omron sealed tact switches discussed here, so they fit the TB-303 / TR-606 buttons nicely, please see:
../303-mods/
That page also contains a datasheet for the Omron switches.
Since August 2010, we are installing the modified Omron switches in Devil Fishes. As a service to people who want to replace their own switches, we are also selling packs of modified Omron switches. Please see these sections of the main Devil Fish page:
../#pots_switches ../#tact_switch_kits
Since our choice of Omron switches implies a criticism of the use of the original unsealed ALPS switches, or the other alternative - sealed ALPS switches - and since the reliability of these switches is so important, I have created this page to give people some insight into the characteristics of these switches, and why we chose the Omron switches.
To the main Devil Fish page.
An update history is at the end: #updates .
Dust appears to cause tact switch failureBefore mid-2010, starting with the first Devil Fishes in 1993, I installed the original kind of unsealed ALPS tact switch, with a "dust guard" - a thin mylar sheet with holes punched in it for the switch stems and LEDs. (The plastic was from a 3M overhead transparency protector.) This greatly prolonged the life of the switches- I guess by a factor of 5 or 10.
The failure mode of these switches is that they become erratic and "bounce" - more than one open-close transition when pressing or releasing the switch, as detected by whatever de-bounce algorithm which is implemented in the TB-303's CPU's firmware. As far as I can tell, the reason is that dust, I guess mainly 100% protein flakes of skin, get inside the switch and are compacted into thin layers on both the stationary contact and the moving metal contact which clicks down against it. With a badly bouncing switch, the coating is thin and appears to be transparent. It is visible under a stereo microscope, and easily removed once the switch is dismantled. I have seen no sign of corrosion or actual wearing of the metal contacts. The switches, once dismantled, can't be re-assembled, so this is not a method for fixing erratic switches. They must be replaced.
The dust guard reduces the amount of dust around the switch which can enter via the circular gap between the moving shaft and the metal ring in the body of the switch. This lends support to my theory that dust is the cause of failure, since the dust guard can't affect any corrosive elements in the atmosphere, or the actual mechanical movement of the switch. The electrical current in the TB-303 switch scanning circuit is very low -about 0.3mA, with an open-circuit voltage of about 5V. I think this is probably too low to "self-clean" the contacts, by way of a little spark or similar. Perhaps increasing the drive current, by altering the 15k resistors R223, R219, R218 and R48, say to 1k or 2.2k, would introduce some kind of self-cleaning current. I have never tried this. It is difficult to anticipate the long-term impact of this, since perhaps that process would also erode the metal surface, leading to corrosion or other problems.
I was pretty happy with this dust-guard approach, since I think that an intensively used machine without such protection might need its switches replaced after a year or so, and it was clear that the dust guard greatly extended this time.
However, there were some instances of these replaced switches becoming erratic after 7 to 10 years, at least with the machines which were intensively used. Ideally, we would replace the switches and no-one would have to worry about replacing them for decades, even if the machine is intensively used.
Searching for alternativesIn mid-2010 I evaluated two kinds of alternative tact switches. I hadn't been aware that a sealed ALPS tact switch had been available for some years. I purchased some Omron sealed tact switches and started using them. These Omron switches had stems a little too wide for the TB-303 buttons, so I developed an elaborate jig with a small grinding wheel on a high-speed drill press to grind down the four sides of the top of the stem, evenly, about a thickness of human hair. This was difficult and error-prone. Later I devised a simpler technique of cutting the stem twice, to make it springy. This is described in ../303-mods/ .During this time, I became aware of the sealed ALPS tact switches and purchased 100 of them. I found they had a very poor feel compared to the original unsealed ALPS switches and the Omron switches. There was little travel in the "click" operation, and little difference between the force required to activate the click and that required to hold the switch closed once it was in the down state. (This was not a bad batch of switches. I was later sent some of these switches by someone who sells them, and they feel identical to the ones I tested.)
I kept two of these switches and returned the remainder.
I can't be absolutely sure these Omron switches will last a long time. However, their datasheet specifies their life as 3 million operations. There's no specification for what this means, but this is a high number for a switch.
I think that as long as dust is excluded, and the switches are not exposed to a corrosive atmosphere, then they will last a very long time. The Omron switches are completely sealed against dust and liquids.
Summary of results#summaryThe short version is that the Omron sealed tact switches have a very good click feel, at least as good as the original unsealed ALPS switches. They involve a somewhat higher activation force, but I think that is fine.
The sealed ALPS switches which we purchased had, in our opinion, a much poorer click action. The travel was much smaller and there was less difference between the activation force and the holding force: that required to hold the switch closed in the downwards position before it snaps up.
According to the spec sheets, both the original and the sealed ALPS switches have the same travel: 0.3mm. However, our experience is that the sealed ALPS switches have a much shorter travel between the point where they snap downwards, and the downwards position.
I intend to obtain some sealed ALPS switches from someone who is happy with them. When I do, I will update this page to confirm or reject the possibility that the sealed ALPS switches we tested behaved differently from the switches that this supplier, and his customers, are apparently happy with.
If you accept our choice - if you lack a profound curiosity about the inner workings and behaviour of tact switches - then there's probably no reason to read further.
In early September 2010, I did some simple tests on the switches and put them up on the 303-mods page. These tests, of activation and holding forces, were in accordance with our judgment about the clicking actions of these switches.
A few days later, I figured out a way of doing better tests. The results of those tests are detailed below. I removed the earlier test results from the 303-mods page.
The most important results can be summarised, but first a few terms I invented for these tests:
Here is a summary of the most important measurements. "mN" means milli-Newton.
Original unsealed ALPS
Sealed ALPS
Sealed Omron
Activation force
1243 mN
1595 mN
1484 mN
Holding force
605 mN
1305 mN
764 mN
Delta force
638 mN
290 mN
720 mN
Delta ratio
51.3%
18.2%
48.5%
Initial displacement
0.148mm
0.123mm
0.164mm
Click displacement
0.230mm
0.125mm
0.234mm
Please note that these tests were not done in a fancy laboratory and did not attempt to sample multiple batches of switches. The force measurements for the sealed ALPS switches were based on two switches and the displacement measurements were based on one of these switches.
The figures in red show how different the sealed ALPS switches (at least the ones I tested) were from the other two types:
The Activation force of the sealed ALPS switch was higher than that of the other two switches.
The Holding force was much higher - nearly twice that of the other two switches.
The Delta force was less than half that of the other two switches.
The ratio of the Delta force to the Activation force was much lower: about 38% of that of the Omron switch and about 35% of that of the unsealed ALPS switch.
The Click displacement was much less - only about 55% of that of the others.
I tested 10 unsealed ALPS switches for forces, and chose two of them with close to average forces for the displacement tests. I used 10 sealed Omron switches in the same way. I only have two sealed ALPS tact switches, and one of them I had partially dismantled. So I used those two for the force tests, and the non-dismantled one for the displacement tests.
Even allowing for variation between batches, the differences between the ALPS sealed switches and the other two types are highly significant, and explain why we felt their click action was so poor.
Maybe some people like a lower Click displacement and lower Delta force, but we don't.
What two standards are used to wire networking cables?
T568A and T568B.
Pg. 799. A+ 8th edition Jean Andrews
Difference between LAN and WAN?
A LAN is a Local Area Network. Local is generally referred to a network contained within a building or an office or a campus.
You might have a LAN for example on a University campus or between office blocks in an office park.
A big corporate perhaps like Anglo American, would generally have a LAN that might span several buildings.
To set up a LAN -relatively speaking- is cheap. If you want to put an extra couple of network points or an extra couple of devices on the network
A WAN is generally slow. If we compare that to a LAN, we said that Ethernet could run up to 1000 Mbps, currently, certainly in South Africa, the fastest WAN is 155 Mbps, so you can see in a LAN we can talk up to 1000 Mbps whereas in a WAN, at the moment, currently,
WAN is expensive. If we look at the path of telecommunications, we need to connect two offices, one in Pretoria and one in Johannesburg together - it 's an expensive operation even for a slow line.
LANLAN (Local Area Network) is a computer network covering a small geographic area, like a home, office, or group of buildingsNetwork in an organisation can be a LAN
Typically owned, controlled, and managed by a single person or organization
Typically owned, controlled, and managed by a single person or organization
LANs have a high data transfer rate
Have a small geographical range and do not need any leased telecommunication lines
one LAN can be connected to other LANs over any distance via telephone lines and radio waves
WANWAN (Wide Area Network) is a computer network that covers a broad area (i.e., any network whose communications links cross metropolitan, regional, or national boundariesinternet is the best example of a WAN
WANs (like the Internet) are not owned by any one organization but rather exist under collective or distributed ownership and management
WANs tend to use technology like ATM, Frame Relay and X.25 for connectivity over the longer distances
WANs have a lower data transfer rate as compared to LANs
Have a large geographical range generally spreading across boundaries and need leased telecommunication lines
Computers connected to a wide-area network are often connected through public networks, such as the telephone system. They can also be connected through leased lines or satellites
For more information visit the Related Link.
A computer network is a group of computer systems and other computing hardware devices that are linked together through communication channels to facilitate communication and resource-sharing among a wide range of users. Networks are commonly categorized based on their characteristics.
LAM, I am not familiar with that term. You might be talking about a LAN, LAN stands for Local Area Network. In other words your high-speed Internet connected to the rest of the world.
1000Base-T
What is the maximum allowable length of a horizontal cable?
There are two different ways of looking at this. The maximum length from end to end from the telecommunications closet to the wor karea device is 100 meters.
The horizontal cable itself is usually a maximum of 90 meters, with 10 meters maximum from the wall plate to the device in the work area.
NAT:
Network Address Translation
Nat is used to deal with public and private address.
most of addresses that we have is private and you must use public address in the internet , so NAT server do this job and make address conversion
How do you use a second monitor over the network?
Try a Google search for MaxiVista. This software requires that you have a spare computer that can be networked with your primary computer. Or you can try Synergy (I haven't actually tried it myself yet). It is free! http://synergy2.sourceforge.net/
What is reliable transportation?
plane. only if its like from Iowa to Florida. if its like Iowa to Minnesota, then take a car.
segment
backbone
Differences between collision detection and collision avoidance?
CSMA/CD (carrier sense multiple access/collision detection) CD (collision detection) defines what happens when two devices sense a clear channel, then attempt to transmit at the same time. A collision occurs, and both devices stop transmission, wait for a random amount of time, then retransmit. This is the technique used to access the 802.3 Ethernet network channel. This method handles collisions as they occur, but if the bus is constantly busy, collisions can occur so often that performance drops drastically. It is estimated that network traffic must be less than 40 percent of the bus capacity for the network to operate efficiently. If distances are long, time lags occur that may result in inappropriate carrier sensing, and hence collisions.
CSMA/CA (carrier sense multiple access/collision avoidance) In CA (collision avoidance), collisions are avoided because each node signals its intent to transmit before actually doing so. This method is not popular because it requires excessive overhead that reduces performance.