| A comparison of Thin-Client Computing Architectures Lan environment or 10Mbps. However, the thin-clients were lacking with multimedia-intensive workloads over wide area networks. The results also showed that higher-level encodings are not necessarily ideal for graphics-intensive multimedia applications with many 26.38 Kb. 1 | read |
| CS320 Networks Laboratory Understanding Ethernet, ip, and arp Ethernet in terms of it’s frame format and the protocol. You will see how Linux binds an ip layer on top of Ethernet (which is pretty much the same as how Windows does it) and how ip uses a protocol known as arp 38.41 Kb. 1 | read |
| Misy 3312: Introduction to Telecommunications This initiative was the starting point for pmu project. In order to guarantee high quality education, the pmu management awarded the system design project 56.17 Kb. 1 | read |
| Mobility and Collaboration Wireless Networking for Mobility and Collaboration Microsoft® Windows® xp adds even more value to wireless networking by making it easier to deploy, configure, and support. This paper describes the benefits of wireless networking with Windows xp and how you can leverage this combination in your 78.07 Kb. 1 | read |
| Dotted decimal notation The eventual exhaustion of the ipv4 address space The ability to route traffic between the ever increasing number of networks that comprise the Internet The first problem is concerned with the eventual depletion of the ip address space 84.12 Kb. 1 | read |
| Introduction to Computer Networks The Advance Research Projects Agency (arpa) designed "Advanced Research Projects Agency Network" (arpanet) for the United States Department of Defense. It was the first computer network in the world in late 1960's and early 1970's 209.71 Kb. 1 | read |
| 1. Function of Access Methods Rules that define how a computer puts data on and takes it from the network cable is known as access method 36.29 Kb. 1 | read |
| Network Address Translation by Jennifer Carroll, Jeff Doyle Network address translation (nat) is a function by which ip addresses within a packet are replaced with different ip addresses. This function is most commonly performed by either routers or firewalls. This sample chapter from Cisco Press focuses on nat 0.92 Mb. 13 | read |