Major local area network technologies are:
Ethernet is by far the most commonly used LAN technology. A number of corporations use the Token Ring technology. FDDI is sometimes used as a backbone LAN interconnecting Ethernet or Token Ring LANs. Another LAN technology, ARCNET, once the most commonly installed LAN technology, is still used in the industrial automation industry.
Typically, a
suite of application programs can be kept on the LAN server. Users who need an
application frequently can download it once and then run it from their local
hard disk. Users can order printing and other services as needed through
applications run on the LAN server. A user can share files with others at the
LAN server; read and write access is maintained by a LAN administrator. A LAN
server may also be used as a Web server if safeguards are taken to secure
internal applications and data from outside access.
In some
situations, a wireless LAN may be preferable to a wired LAN because it is
cheaper to install and maintain.
Ethernet is the most widely-installed local area network technology. Specified in a standard, IEEE 802.3, Ethernet was originally developed by Xerox from an earlier specification called (for the Palo Alto Research Center Aloha network) and then developed further by Xerox, DEC, and Intel. An Ethernet LAN typically uses coaxial cable or special grades of twisted pair wires. Ethernet is also used in wireless LANs. The most commonly installed Ethernet systems are called 10BASE-T and provide transmission speeds up to 10 Mbps. Devices are connected to the cable and compete for access using a Carrier Sense Multiple Access with Collision Detection CSMA/CD protocol.
Fast
Ethernet or 100BASE-T provides transmission speeds up to 100 megabits
per second and is typically used for LAN
Ethernet was named by Robert Metcalfe, one of its developers, for the passive substance called luminiferous (light-transmitting) ether; that was once thought to pervade the universe, carrying light throughout. Ethernet was so- named to describe the way that cabling, also a passive medium, could similarly carry data everywhere throughout the network.