When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Bus network - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bus_network

    In a bus network, every station will receive all network traffic, and the traffic generated by each station has equal transmission priority. [3] A bus network forms a single network segment and collision domain. In order for nodes to share the bus, they use a medium access control technology such as carrier-sense multiple access (CSMA) or a bus ...

  3. MOST Bus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MOST_Bus

    It can be used for applications inside or outside the car. The serial MOST bus uses a daisy-chain topology or ring topology and synchronous serial communication to transport audio, video, voice and data signals via plastic optical fiber (POF) (MOST25, MOST150) or electrical conductor (MOST50, MOST150) physical layers.

  4. Token bus network - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Token_bus_network

    Token Bus was standardized by IEEE standard 802.4. It was mainly used for industrial applications. Token Bus was used by General Motors for their Manufacturing Automation Protocol (MAP) standardization effort. [4] This differs from Token Ring networks in that the endpoints of the bus do not meet to form a physical ring.

  5. Modbus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modbus

    Modbus or MODBUS is a client/server data communications protocol in the application layer. [1] It was originally designed for use with programmable logic controllers (PLCs), [2] but has become a de facto standard communication protocol for communication between industrial electronic devices in a wide range of buses and networks.

  6. Point-to-multipoint communication - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Point-to-multipoint...

    A point-to-multipoint radio base station manufactured by CableFree installed for a wireless internet service provider in Rotterdam.The station has four radio interfaces each connected to a separate sector antenna, each providing 90 degrees coverage.

  7. Tree network - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tree_network

    A tree topology, or star-bus topology, is a hybrid network topology in which star networks are interconnected via bus networks. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Tree networks are hierarchical, and each node can have an arbitrary number of child nodes.

  8. Transit Elevated Bus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transit_elevated_bus

    The Transit Elevated Bus (TEB) (simplified Chinese: 巴铁; traditional Chinese: 巴鐵; pinyin: Bā Tiě) was a proposed new bus concept where a guided bus straddles above road traffic, giving it the alternative names such as straddling bus, straddle bus, land airbus, or tunnel bus by international media.

  9. Enterprise bus matrix - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enterprise_bus_matrix

    The bus matrix purpose is one of high abstraction and visionary planning on the data warehouse architectural level. By dictating coherency in the development and implementation of an overall data warehouse the bus architecture approach enables an overall vision of the broader enterprise integration and consistency while at the same time dividing the problem into more manageable parts [2 ...