|
More
Meters
Research Library
|
|
CommScope
|
The IEEE 802.3ba amendment that will add 40 Gb/s and 100 Gb/s rates to the Ethernet standard is nearing completion, scheduled for publication in mid 2010. The draft currently specifies supportable distances of 100 meters on OM3 fiber and 150 meters on OM4 fiber for both rates. The common distances for both rates are the result of using inverse multiplexing over parallel fibers, wherein the ...
|
|
|
Black Box Network Services
|
Universal Serial Bus (USB) is an extremely popular serial interface that makes adding peripherals to your computer incredibly easy.
A USB peripheral simply plugs right into the port and works. You don’t need to install a card; you don’t even need to turn off your computer. Because USB configuration happens automatically, built-in USB means you don’t have to fiddle with drivers and software when ...
|
|
|
IneoQuest Technologies
|
MPEG video carried in Transport Streams via conventional Ethernet packet switched networks can arrive at its destination node with a time distortion – that is, the time between packets at the destination is different from that at the source. If packets are delayed by the network such as in Figure 1, some packets arrive in bursts with interpacket delays shorter than when they were transmitted such ...
|
|
|
Aruba Networks
|
Wi-Fi technology has carved a path of ever-increasing performance from the earliest pre-802.11 standards through 802.11b to 802.11a/g, with peak data rates rising from 2Mbps to 54Mbps. The latest set of innovations is a package known as 802.11n.
We refer in this paper to two key documents that shape the industry, and will endeavor to maintain consistency in using these terms:
‘IEEE 802.11n’ is ...
|
|
|
Amdocs
|
The connected world revolution has begun. Super-fast, highly efficient networks, constantly connected customers, increasingly sophisticated connected devices…With trillions of devices and applications all connected to and utilizing the network,the connected world will touch all aspects of our daily lives—from game consoles, DVD players, netbooks, eReaders, to health-monitoring devices, energy ...
|
|
|
|