FEATURED VIDEO

Sponsored By:
SLIDE SHOWS
Our list of the most innovative executives of the year spotlights the people that are pushing the envelope with new products and channel programs to bring solution providers to new heights.
Find out which executives made the grade and held their own, despite the great IT downturn of 2009.
Most everyone loves Thanksgiving turkeys. But IT industry turkeys? Not so much. We look at 10 examples of 'turkeys' that have disappointed the tech industry this year.
INSIDE CHANNELWEB

Results found for: LAN
Printer Print This Page

Image Friendly
techweb
LAN
techweb
(Local Area Network) A communications network that serves users within a confined geographical area. The "clients" are the user's workstations typically running Windows, although Mac and Linux clients are also used. The "servers" hold programs and data that are shared by the clients. Servers come in a wide range of sizes from Intel-based servers to mainframes. Printers can also be connected to the network and shared (see print server).

Thick and Thin Clients
In a LAN, the client machines are mostly Windows-based PCs that contain their own applications. These "thick" clients are the norm; however, some companies use "thin" clients, which are stripped-down machines. Some are diskless and floppy-only workstations that retrieve all software and data from the server. Windows terminals are also used, which are Windows PCs that act like input/output terminals. They perform no business processing and display only what comes from a central server. See thin client and Windows terminal.

The Network OS
The controlling software in a LAN is the network operating system in the server (Windows, Mac OS, Linux, Unix, NetWare). A component part resides in each client and allows the application to read and write data from the server as if it were on the local machine.

     Client workstations can also function as a server, allowing users access to data on another user's machine. These peer-to-peer networks are often simpler to install and manage, but dedicated servers provide better performance and handle higher transaction volume. In large networks, multiple, dedicated servers are used.

The Transport
Data transfer over the network is managed by a transport protocol such as TCP/IP or IPX. The physical transmission is performed by the access method, almost exclusively Ethernet, which is on the motherboard or in the network adapter cards (NICs) plugged into the machines. The actual communications path is the twisted pair or optical fiber cable that interconnects each network adapter. See WAN, TCP/IP, Ethernet and client/server.




Clients and Servers in a LAN
This illustration shows one server for each type of service on a LAN. In practice, several functions can be combined in one machine and, for large volumes, multiple machines can be used to balance the traffic for the same service. For example, a large Internet Web site is often made up of several Web servers.










The Software in a Network Client
This shows the various software components that reside in a user's client workstation in a network.




The Software in a Network Server
This shows the network operating system and various system software components in a network server.








Search For LAN On ChannelWeb

Find the latest news and information on LAN from across the Channelweb Network of IT Web sites.


techweb
temrs similiar to your header
Entries before LAN
techweb
techweb lamda
techweb lamda switching
techweb lamer
techweb LAMP
techweb LAMP stack
techweb Entries after LAN
techweb
techweb LAN adapter
techweb LAN administrator
techweb LAN analyzer
techweb LAN card
techweb LAN-centric
techweb
define another it term
techweb techweb

techweb
Or get a random definition
techweb
copyright THIS COPYRIGHTED DEFINITION IS FOR PERSONAL USE ONLY.
All other reproduction is strictly prohibited without permission from the publisher.

Copyright (©) 1981-2008 The Computer Language Company
Inc All rights reserved.
ADVERTISEMENT




CHANNEL SERVICES >>