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Wireless Home Networking - Index of

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Figure 2-1:<br />

It’s all in the<br />

stars —<br />

a typical<br />

network<br />

star-shaped<br />

topology.<br />

PC<br />

PC<br />

PC<br />

Hub<br />

Chapter 2: From a to n and b-yond<br />

Hubs and switches<br />

Networks transmit data in bundles called packets. Along with the raw information<br />

being transmitted, each packet also contains the network address <strong>of</strong><br />

the computer that sent it and the network address <strong>of</strong> the recipient computer.<br />

Network hubs send packets indiscriminately to all ports <strong>of</strong> all computers connected<br />

to the hub — which is why you don’t see them much any longer.<br />

A special type <strong>of</strong> hub called a switched hub examines each packet, determines<br />

the addressee and port, and forwards the packet only to the computer and<br />

port to which it is addressed. Most <strong>of</strong>ten, switched hubs are just called<br />

switches. A switch reads the addressee information in each packet and sends<br />

the packet directly to the segment <strong>of</strong> the network to which the addressee is<br />

connected. Packets that aren’t addressed to a particular network segment are<br />

never transmitted over that segment, and the switch acts as a filter to eliminate<br />

unnecessary network traffic. Switches make more efficient use <strong>of</strong> the<br />

available transmission bandwidth than standard hubs, and therefore <strong>of</strong>fer<br />

higher aggregate throughput to the devices on the switched network.<br />

Routers<br />

Over a large network and on the Internet, a router is analogous to a superefficient<br />

postal service — it reads the addressee information in each data packet<br />

and communicates with other routers over the network or Internet to determine<br />

the best route for each packet to take. In the home, a home or broadband<br />

router uses a capability called Network Address Translation (NAT) to enable all<br />

the computers on a home network to share a single Internet address on the<br />

cable or DSL network. The home router sits between your broadband modem<br />

and all the computers and networked devices in your house, and directs traffic<br />

to and from devices both within the network and out on the Internet.<br />

So, the local area network in your home connects to the wide area network,<br />

which takes signals out <strong>of</strong> the home and on to the Internet.<br />

PC<br />

PC<br />

31

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