• tomytronics@alien.topB
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    10 months ago

    Don’t forget the thick net cable.

    And I hated base2 network, so fiddy to work with and can be unreliable if a terminator was removed by a prankster or if there’s a faulty network hardware somewhere. BaseT was the best of both reliable and cheap.

    I still remember a trick to remember which is which: hub, switch, and router. A hub is like an intersection with only stop sign. Good for low traffic but high collision risk with high traffic. Switch is like an intersection with traffic light, better for high traffic. And router is like an intersection with police car present to enforce traffic.

    • Coffee_Ops@alien.topB
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      10 months ago

      Switches are better for low traffic too though because they don’t flood and they regenerate the signal. These days I don’t know that you could detect a latency difference between a hub and a switch.

      • LittlebitsDK@alien.topB
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        10 months ago

        interesting analogy… we learned that it was just a computer standing with a megaphone screaming to all other pc’s on the same hub… where a switch was like sending a papernote to your classmate during class ;-)

      • LittlebitsDK@alien.topB
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        10 months ago

        interesting analogy… we learned that it was just a computer standing with a megaphone screaming to all other pc’s on the same hub… where a switch was like sending a papernote to your classmate during class ;-)