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Twisted Pair (10BaseT) Ethernet

For various reasons[4], this is now the preferred Ethernet technology. In this system, stations are "star-wired" to a central hub, using a high-performance 4-pair twisted pair cable, thus:
UTP Ethernet hub
The hub acts as a repeater, so whilst this superficially looks like a group of point-to-point links, all stations still "see" each other's transmissions, just the same as the coax-cable bus topology. In other words, it's still a "shared medium" network, and the attached computers still occupy a single collision domain.
 
The cable is usually "Category-5" (always abbreviated to "Cat5") unshielded twisted pair (UTP) or better, although the older, lower performance Cat-3 cable is also sometimes encountered. In practice, there are various hardware technologies involved in a typical installation: in-wall fixed wiring, patch cables, patch panels, etc. There are also strong limits on "cable-run" lengths.
 
[4] We will discuss these reasons in the tute.
Lecture 14: Multiaccess Networks Copyright © 2005 P.Scott, La Trobe University Bendigo.


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