Network Topologies - CompTIA Network+ N10-007 Prof. Messer
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Did I understand him correctly saying there are still ring networks used by metropolitan areas?
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@mary networks*
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@mary said in Network Topologies - CompTIA Network+ N10-007 Prof. Messer:
@mary networks*
You know you can edit old posts, right?
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@mary said in Network Topologies - CompTIA Network+ N10-007 Prof. Messer:
Did I understand him correctly saying there are still ring networks used by metropolitan areas?
Resilient fiber networks frequently have two fibers - one going in each direction. It's often called a fiber ring.
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@Dashrender yes, sometimes it doesn't work on my phone
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@mary said in Network Topologies - CompTIA Network+ N10-007 Prof. Messer:
@Dashrender yes, sometimes it doesn't work on my phone
As someone that posts from mobile a lot, frequently while driving /cough, I never have a problem with editing posts.
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@mary said in Network Topologies - CompTIA Network+ N10-007 Prof. Messer:
Did I understand him correctly saying there are still ring networks used by metropolitan areas?
Cities are government agencies and often very out of date.
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@Dashrender said in Network Topologies - CompTIA Network+ N10-007 Prof. Messer:
@mary said in Network Topologies - CompTIA Network+ N10-007 Prof. Messer:
Did I understand him correctly saying there are still ring networks used by metropolitan areas?
Resilient fiber networks frequently have two fibers - one going in each direction. It's often called a fiber ring.
But should not be, that's not a ring.
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The last true ring network I worked with was token ring. Went away completely mid 90s, and good riddance.
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@travisdh1 said in Network Topologies - CompTIA Network+ N10-007 Prof. Messer:
The last true ring network I worked with was token ring. Went away completely mid 90s, and good riddance.
IBM still had it in production well into the 2000s.
But that is a LAN ring. WAN ring was around longer.
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I always create 2 diagrams for Network Topologies;
- Physical Connections
- Logical Connections
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@scottalanmiller said in Network Topologies - CompTIA Network+ N10-007 Prof. Messer:
@Dashrender said in Network Topologies - CompTIA Network+ N10-007 Prof. Messer:
@mary said in Network Topologies - CompTIA Network+ N10-007 Prof. Messer:
Did I understand him correctly saying there are still ring networks used by metropolitan areas?
Resilient fiber networks frequently have two fibers - one going in each direction. It's often called a fiber ring.
But should not be, that's not a ring.
Yes, it is. Looks like this for example:
Network topology is a ring. But it's still good ol' ethernet.
I believe each blue line is a bidirectional link. So that each switch has two incoming links and two outgoing links. This type of topology is very common for a backbone where you have long distances. While a full mesh network is more resilient it requires a lot more fiber.