When discussing Ethernet data, the terms frame and packet are often used interchangeably. Frames and packets are the electronic containers that carry our data from point-to-point by navigating LANs ...
Ethernet and Sonet are on a crash course. With Ethernet continuing to push its way out of the enterprise into the access and metro sectors, developers of Sonet equipment are being pushed to map ...
The venerable ESP8266 has rocked the Internet of Things world. Originally little more than a curious $3 WiFi-to-serial bridge, bit by bit, the true power of the ESP has become known, fully ...
Wired data connections will never be entirely replaced by wireless ones, but the Ethernet protocol still has some design constraints that limit the performance of certain data transfers. One way to ...
Vendors are shipping around 300 million Ethernet-port units/year. Backward compatibility and scalability are key factors in Ethernet's success. Modulation techniques provide order-of-magnitude ...
Trying to understand every detail involved in creating an embedded product that communicates via Internet protocols can be a daunting task. These protocols were created for systems that generally have ...
Ethernet is the major local-area network (LAN) in which we connect our computers, routers, and printers. It has taken an important role in the industrial engineering world, having become the ...
This file type includes high-resolution graphics and schematics when applicable. Construction, mining, and agricultural machines have become amazing platforms of mobile automation. GPS, for instance, ...
As broadcast technology evolves, demands on it become more complex, driving the development of systems. While networking technology has been available for use in broadcast systems for some years, it ...
Recently, the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) completed its work on an iSCSI specification that leaves the industry with a standard for building storage networks based on Ethernet/TCP/IP ...
An IEEE task force is nearing completion of a standard to run Ethernet at a blistering 10 gigabits per second, which will mean an Ethernet that’s not only 10 times faster, but also more widespread ...
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