LAN Basics

LAN Basics

In the early 1980s, when most businesses were still using networked mainframes, two changes took place in computing infrastructures. First, there was a general growth in the number of devices in the organization, which created traffic growth. Second, skilled, engineering-oriented users began sneaking their own workstations in to work, and they would ask the company's MIS department to provide networking to the host computer; this created additional challenges for enterprise networking.

The increased traffic made companies step back to figure out how all the information that was creating all the traffic was being used. They found that about 80% of the information used by people within a given business address also came from within that address. Only 20% was being exchanged with a location outside the enterprise's physical perimeters. This was a clue that a networking option was needed to focus on a more limited geographical span, and the solution that emerged became known as the LAN.

LAN Concepts and Benefits

Given that in the 1980s up to 80% of the data used within a business address also came from that address, one key concept associated with the traditional LAN is that it acts as a common data highway that allows the linking of internal information resources. This common highway provides a great economic advantage because it allows resources both software and hardware to be shared.

Another key concept associated with local area networking is that the LAN is responsible for connecting the senders and the receivers, and it discriminates between all the nodes on the network. Traditionally, LANs relied on a shared medium (see Figure 8.1). Everyone was basically connected to the same cable (until about 1987, the medium was generally coax cable, and then other media were built into the recommendations, as well). Because there's an increasing demand for bandwidth to the desktop to support multimedia applications, we are moving away from these shared-media environments to configurations that use hubs or switches. These devices enable each workstation to have its own dedicated connection, increasing the bandwidth available to the workstation.

Figure 8.1. An example of a shared-medium LAN

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Finally, LANs can be deployed to serve either peer-to-peer arrangements, where essentially every node is equal (that is, capable of processing and storing in its own right), or server-based networks, in which one computer is the repository (that is, the server) and the other computers request information from and store information on the server.

There are four benefits associated with creating these internal LAN infrastructures:

         They allow very timely access to data. Knowledge is a competitive edge, so the faster you have access to the newest and latest information, the better off you will be in servicing customers and developing products.

         They allow standardization of applications. Over time, departments acquire different computing platforms, depending on the cycles between centralized and decentralized management. So, instead of having to go through the labor hours and cost of porting applications to reside in different platforms, you can use LANs to enable sharing of an application over the common data highway, resulting in savings and convenience.

         Because of the resource sharing, they provide great cost reductions.

         They promote speedy and functional communication within an organization.

LAN Components

Typically, a LAN is made up of several key elements:

         Network nodes A network node is not a specific device; it is a single, addressable entity. It is an element to which a communications line interfaces, so a node could be a personal computer, a multiplexer, a modem, and so on. In the context of a LAN, a unique address is associated with each network node.

         NICs The network interface card (NIC), sometimes referred to as a network adapter card, fits inside a computer and connects it to the underlying physical transport.

         Cabling system The cabling system (which can be either wired or wireless media) performs the actual connection.

         Software Software moves from computer to computer and packages bits into known containers with proper navigational controls.

         User interface The user interface provides a way for the user to operate the software.

         Operating system The operating system services the users' needs for files and devices such as printers, and it provides network management functions.

 



Telecommunications Essentials
Telecommunications Essentials: The Complete Global Source for Communications Fundamentals, Data Networking and the Internet, and Next-Generation Networks
ISBN: 0201760320
EAN: 2147483647
Year: 2005
Pages: 84

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