
Anzeige: Blitzangebot: Bürostuhl von Daccormax 24 Prozent günstiger
Daccormax ist die beliebteste Marke für ergonomische Bürostühle bei Amazon. Jetzt gibt es den absoluten Top-Seller im Blitzangebot. (Technik/Hardware)

Just another news site
Daccormax ist die beliebteste Marke für ergonomische Bürostühle bei Amazon. Jetzt gibt es den absoluten Top-Seller im Blitzangebot. (Technik/Hardware)
Mehr als 100 Angebote hat es für den Aufbau des Schnellladenetzes für Elektroautos gegeben. Erste Zuschläge sollen im Spätsommer erteilt werden. (Ladesäule, Elektroauto)
Activision-Chef Bobby Kotick hat Angaben über die Leistungsstärke der nächsten Konsole von Nintendo gemacht. Eine Einordnung. (Nintendo Switch, Nintendo)
Mehrere Schauspieler wurden getestet, jetzt wurde bekanntgegeben, wer im Film Superman: Legacy Superman und Lois Lane spielen wird. (Filme & Serien, Unterhaltung & Hobby)
One of the biggest computing inventions of all time, courtesy of Xerox PARC.
Enlarge (credit: Adrienne Bresnahan | Getty Images)
With Ethernet turning 50 this year, Ars is resurfacing this feature on the development and evolution of Ethernet that was originally published in 2011.
Although watching TV shows from the 1970s suggests otherwise, the era wasn't completely devoid of all things resembling modern communication systems. Sure, the 50Kbps modems that the ARPANET ran on were the size of refrigerators, and the widely used Bell 103 modems only transferred 300 bits per second. But long-distance digital communication was common enough, relative to the number of computers deployed. Terminals could also be hooked up to mainframe and minicomputers over relatively short distances with simple serial lines or with more complex multidrop systems. This was all well known; what was new in the '70s was the local area network (LAN). But how to connect all these machines?
The point of a LAN is to connect many more than just two systems, so a simple cable back and forth doesn't get the job done. Connecting several thousands of computers to a LAN can in theory be done using a star, a ring, or a bus topology. A star is obvious enough: every computer is connected to some central point. A bus consists of a single, long cable that computers connect to along its run. With a ring, a cable runs from the first computer to the second, from there to the third and so on until all participating systems are connected, and then the last is connected to the first, completing the ring.
One of the biggest computing inventions of all time, courtesy of Xerox PARC.
Enlarge (credit: Adrienne Bresnahan | Getty Images)
With Ethernet turning 50 this year, Ars is resurfacing this feature on the development and evolution of Ethernet that was originally published in 2011.
Although watching TV shows from the 1970s suggests otherwise, the era wasn't completely devoid of all things resembling modern communication systems. Sure, the 50Kbps modems that the ARPANET ran on were the size of refrigerators, and the widely used Bell 103 modems only transferred 300 bits per second. But long-distance digital communication was common enough, relative to the number of computers deployed. Terminals could also be hooked up to mainframe and minicomputers over relatively short distances with simple serial lines or with more complex multidrop systems. This was all well known; what was new in the '70s was the local area network (LAN). But how to connect all these machines?
The point of a LAN is to connect many more than just two systems, so a simple cable back and forth doesn't get the job done. Connecting several thousands of computers to a LAN can in theory be done using a star, a ring, or a bus topology. A star is obvious enough: every computer is connected to some central point. A bus consists of a single, long cable that computers connect to along its run. With a ring, a cable runs from the first computer to the second, from there to the third and so on until all participating systems are connected, and then the last is connected to the first, completing the ring.
Die Spionage-Aktion war mutmaßlich ein Misserfolg. Der Ballon soll keine Daten übertragen haben. (Spionage, Politik)
Stahl- und Chemieindustrie brauchen Wasserstoff und Letztere auch Biomasse, um klimaneutral wirtschaften zu können. Doch in die Diskussion um das Heizen mischen sie sich kaum ein. Von Hanno Böck (Wasserstoff, Energiewende)
Die Deutsche Telekom ist mit sechs Millionen FTTH-Zugängen der größte Anbieter in dem Bereich in Deutschland. (Glasfaser, Telekom)
Mit 900 Millionen Euro will die Regierung noch in diesem Jahr den Aufbau der privaten Ladeinfrastruktur fördern. Das betrifft auch die Eigenstromversorgung. (Elektroauto, Auto)