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Topic: Metropolitan area network


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In the News (Sat 14 Nov 09)

  
  Metropolitan area network - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Metropolitan Area Networks or MANs are large computer networks usually spanning a campus or a city.
For instance a university or college may have a MAN that joins together many of their local area networks (LANs) situated around site of a fraction of a square kilometer.
Then from their MAN they could have several wide area network (WAN) links to other universities or the Internet.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Metropolitan_area_network   (235 words)

  
 Metropolitan Area Network (MAN)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
A metropolitan area network (MAN) may be a network that is connecting multiple local area networks of an organization situated in some square kilometre buildings.
Many metropolitan area networks (MANs) cover an area the size of a city, although in some cases MANs may be as small as a group of buildings.
The metropolitan area network (MAN), its communications links and equipment are generally owned by either a consortium of users or by a single network provider who sells the service to the users.
www.topitmedia.com /networks_MAN.html   (251 words)

  
 Metropolitan Area Network (MAN)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
A Metropolitan Area Network (MAN) is one of a number of types of networks (see also LAN and WAN).
Many MANs cover an area the size of a city, although in some cases MANs may be as small as a group of buildings or as large as the North of Scotland.
A MAN often acts as a high speed network to allow sharing of regional resources (similar to a large LAN).
www.erg.abdn.ac.uk /users/gorry/eg3561/intro-pages/man.html   (257 words)

  
 metropolitan area network - a Whatis.com definition - see also: MAN   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
A metropolitan area network (MAN) is a network that interconnects users with computer resources in a geographic area or region larger than that covered by even a large local area network (LAN) but smaller than the area covered by a wide area network (WAN).
The term is applied to the interconnection of networks in a city into a single larger network (which may then also offer efficient connection to a wide area network).
It is also used to mean the interconnection of several local area networks by bridging them with backbone lines.
searchnetworking.techtarget.com /sDefinition/0,,sid7_gci214083,00.html   (209 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
A wide area network according to Claim 4, wherein said indoor units comprise: a chassis, said chassis having receiving means for a plurality of line cards; and a line card, said line card providing a service specific interface between said chassis and a customer premise equipment.
A wide area communication network according to Claim 16, wherein said packets are ATM packets including a header portion and a payload portion, said header portion including a quality of service parameter and wherein said network further comprises means for allocating system bandwidth based on said quality of service parameter.
A broadband local metropolitan area telecommunication network according to Claim 20, wherein said indoor units further comprise: a chassis, said chassis having receiving means for a plurality of line cards; and a line card, said line card providing a service specific interface between said chassis and a customer premise equipment.
www.wipo.int /cgi-pct/guest/getbykey5?KEY=98/58477.981223&ELEMENT_SET=DECL   (7412 words)

  
 Photonic local/metropolitan area network - Patent 4970717
The local area network of claim 4 further comprising switching delay means coupled to the output of said first packet detector having a delay which is substantially equal to the time required to operate said switching means.
The local area network of claim 5 further comprising control circuit means coupled to said first and second packet detectors and said first and second switching means to selectively pass an arriving packet at the second node or to loop-back the arriving packet to said first node over said second optical fiber path.
The proposed invention deals with the local/metropolitan area networks, as opposed to wide-area networks in "Blazenet" the difference being the number of packets that are stored in the loop-back path and, consequently, the switching algorithm used by the switching nodes.
www.freepatentsonline.com /4970717.html   (3280 words)

  
 Metropolitan Area Network and MAN Protocols
Metropolitan Area Network(MAN)is a computer networks usually spanning a campus or a city, which typically connect a few local area networks using high speed backbone technologies.
Many MANs cover an area the size of a city, although in some cases MANs may be as small as a group of buildings.
The Metropolitan Area Network (MAN) protocols are mostly at the data link level (layer 2 in the OSI model), which are defined by IEEE, ITU-T, etc.
www.javvin.com /protocolMAN.html   (309 words)

  
 MAN :: Metropolitan Area Network
MAN / Metropolitan Area Network is much like a WAN / Wide Area Network in that it is larger than a mere LAN / Local Area Network, which is located within a single location, but it is located within one geographical location such as the metro St Louis area.
So a MAN / Metropolitan Area Network is much bigger than a single small network in one business location, but not spread out over the country or the world.
A MAN / Metropolitan Area Network must be connected by a third party such as normal telephone wires, but should be less expensive than the typical WAN / Wide Area Network since all connection charges are local.
www.inforingpress.com /computer-careers/man.htm   (478 words)

  
 Foundry Networks : Solutions : Application Note : Metropolitan Area Network Offerings   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Specifically, a MAN is a single, separate, identifiable "metro area network" that is owned and run by a single network operator, usually a service provider or carrier.
The MAN is the network, or set of networks, that picks up traffic from the LAN and passes it to the WAN or to another LAN in the same metro area.
The explosion of data traffic in the MAN has produced a new breed of service provider, one that is focused on profiting from the combination of raw data bandwidth, enhanced network control, cost-effective technologies, and the convergence of data, voice and video into a massive, profitable data stream.
www.foundrynet.com /solutions/appNotes/Metro.html   (2521 words)

  
 Telecommunications: More Relief for the MAN? - metropolitan area network - Technology Information
ILEC networks are hierarchical in nature: access nodes feed aggregation nodes, which in turn feed the core offices.
While all-optical networking offers the means to minimize and even eliminate these conversions, there are situations where it is necessary: wavelength translation (to avoid blocking and stranded capacity) and regeneration (to ensure signal integrity).
Furthermore, if the control plane for all-optical networks is to be capable of establishing end-to-end connections through a general mesh topology, it must be capable of performing traffic engineering functions including resource discovery, state information dissemination, path selection and path management.
www.findarticles.com /p/articles/mi_m0TLC/is_6_35/ai_76472166   (1207 words)

  
 MAN (Metropolitan Area Network) (Linktionary term)
Metropolitan area networks connect businesses to businesses, and businesses to WANs and the Internet.
A MAN is typically a backbone optical network that spans a metropolitan area, usually in a ring configuration.
A new era of computer networking is emerging with new MAN technologies that extend Ethernet LAN networks across the MAN via fiber-optic links.
www.linktionary.com /m/man.html   (279 words)

  
 Abbey National's Fibre Optic Metropolitan Area Network : FUJITSU
As a result of the instigation of the network, Abbey National saved on Parallel Sysplex IBM license fees, which in itself paid for the project over a couple of years.
Guiding all areas of the project was 'resilience' -- such a large network would be exposed to a variety of 'threats', such as traffic, road works, water, etc., all of which had to be planned for and negated.
The success of the network and the training was immediately evident to Abbey National, who had been using externally managed services for their networking prior to the instigation of their own cable network.
www.fujitsu.com /global/casestudies/WWW2_casestudy_Abbey-National.html   (1270 words)

  
 CITEC - Metropolitan Area Network (MAN)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
MAN (Metropolitan Area Network) Solutions enables CITEC to deliver fast data transfer between offices, data centres and CITEC in the Brisbane Commercial Business District (CBD) to Queensland Government Agencies over our own infrastructure.
MAN solutions provides wideband connectivity to Queensland government customers within the Brisbane CBD over network infrastructure that is owned and managed by CITEC.
The network is designed and managed to ensure optimal security and reliability via a multiple loop architecture that can provide diverse path redundancy.
www.citec.com.au /solutions/products/network_connectivity/metropolitan_area_network/index.shtml   (224 words)

  
 Chapter 1: What is a Network?
A Local Area Network (LAN) is a network that is confined to a relatively small area.
It is generally limited to a geographic area such as a writing lab, school, or building.
Networkable versions of many popular software programs are available at considerable savings when compared to buying individually licensed copies.
fcit.coedu.usf.edu /network/chap1/chap1.htm   (836 words)

  
 FaTMAN - Fife and Tayside Metropolitan Area Network
The network uses Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM) which is the preferred basis of future networking.
Metropolitan Area Network developments like FaTMAN will provide the development path for SuperJANET and, in this respect, Scotland is leading the way in the UK.
It is to the credit of managers of the computing and network services in the three universities that such a network is now under construction.
www.fatman.net.uk /history.htm   (540 words)

  
 Metropolitan technologies will benefit providers and users
Service providers in the metropolitan-area network arena are in the midst of a technology explosion that promises to bring customers lower bandwidth costs, more flexible service provisioning and a wider range of service options.
A few providers, such as Yipes, have committed to supporting voice on their Ethernet metropolitan networks, but the quality of this service is as yet unproven.
Metropolitan providers can use this technology to squeeze more capacity out of the fiber they lease or own.
www.networkworld.com /columnists/2001/00304464.html?nf   (836 words)

  
 Telecommunications: Breaking the MAN Bottleneck - metropolitan area network - Technology Information
SONET transport rings, on which MANs are based, provide the reliability needed for voice, but SONET, as it is traditionally used, tends to be inefficient for mixed voice and data services.
Providers are recognizing that they need a new MAN optical infrastructure that comprehends the network's changed needs, increases bandwidth and makes it easier to supply voice, data and video services cost effectively.
For example, a l0-Mbps Ethernet private network would require only seven DS1s of bandwidth to transport, but for economy the customer is likely to lease an entire DS3, leaving the bulk of the pipe unused.
www.findarticles.com /p/articles/mi_m0TLC/is_6_35/ai_76472144   (1320 words)

  
 HORNET   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Conventional WDM metropolitan area networks (MANs) are used as distribution networks to link the high capacity backbone to the access, local area, and campus area networks.
HORNET is a WDM MAN ring that uses packet-over-WDM technology to form a multiple-access ring architecture instead of a ring formed of point-to-point links (we define packet-over-WDM as packet-switching at the optical layer, instead of at the network layer).
This allows HORNET to be optimized for metro area traffic conditions as content is distributed throughout the network, and bursty, unpredictable packet-based communications is required between all access points on the network.
wdm.stanford.edu /hornet/hornet.html   (700 words)

  
 Smithsonian
D.S.U.S.D.’s microwave metropolitan area network was designed to connect 23 schools, kindergarten through high school, and a district office.
A: The microwave metropolitan area network was designed to allow students, teachers and staff to communicate effectively and at high speeds.
The network will be connected via microwave to Continental Cablevision, our local cable company so that school activities such as athletic events, plays, and band concerts, etc., could be broadcast to the community.
www.dsusd.k12.ca.us /smithsonian.htm   (2999 words)

  
 MetropolitanAreaNetwork - SeattleWireless
An advantage of such a network is that you can roam a greater distance than if you were depending on just your AP at home.
This kind of network can be represented by the following example: Take your LAN and connect it to your neighbor's LAN.
This could also be a Massive Area Network....
www.seattlewireless.net /index.cgi/MetropolitanAreaNetwork   (66 words)

  
 3Com Press Release: 07/17/2002 3Com Launches Wireless Metropolitan Area Network for City of Rolling Meadows   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
In addition to the wireless network, the existing local area network (LAN) in each of the participating city agencies has been upgraded to faster, higher performance Gigabit Ethernet networks for increased technological capabilities.
Eswoosh, a technology consulting and development company and 3Com partner, is the coordinator of the RMMAN organization and is joined by technology leaders from the local school districts including CCSD 15, High School District 214 and Harper College, as well as leaders from the City of Rolling Meadows, Library, Park District and Chamber of Commerce.
In 1979, the company was founded by the principal inventor of Ethernet technology on which virtually all local area networks are based.
www.3com.com /corpinfo/en_US/pressbox/press_release.jsp?INFO_ID=131425   (642 words)

  
 What is MAN? - A Word Definition From the Webopedia Computer Dictionary   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Short for Metropolitan Area Network, a data network designed for a town or city.
In terms of geographic breadth, MANs are larger than local-area networks (LANs), but smaller than wide-area networks (WANs).
MANs are usually characterized by very high-speed connections using fiber optical cable or other digital media.
www.webopedia.com /TERM/M/MAN.html   (215 words)

  
 What are Metropolitan Area Networks or MAN's ?   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
A MAN (metropolitan area network) is a network that interconnects users with computer resources in a geographic area or region larger than that covered by even a large local area network (LAN) but smaller than the area covered by a wide area network (
Data Communications of networks in a city into a single larger network (which may then also offer efficient connection to a wide area network).
These limitations define a MAN or Metropolitan Area Network.
www.pulsecom.com /manintro.htm   (178 words)

  
 The London Metropolitan Area Network   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
The network, which is known as the London MAN (Metropolitan Area Network), has been supplied and installed by ICn, a consortium of the cable TV companies that operate in the London Area.
In common with the London MAN, most use ATM (Asynchronous Transfer Mode), which is the latest development in networking technology, to provide connections at data rates of up to 155 Mbits/s.
Although the primary purpose of the London MAN is to provide better Internet access to the connected sites, one of the benefits of ATM is that it enables other types of network applications such as video-conferencing and telephony to use the network simultaneously.
www.ucl.ac.uk /is/icontact/13/p6.html   (441 words)

  
 Hospital deploys 3Com Metropolitan Area Network (MAN)
The 1,000-user metropolitan area network (MAN) is based on a 622 megabits-per-second (Mbps) ATM backbone and is utilising 155 Mbps network devices for data traffic across Hendrick's 11-building campus in Abilene, Texas, and its data centre, five miles away.
Powered by its new 3Com network, Hendrick is expediting several year 2000-compliant applications and paving the way for a cache of sophisticated multimedia services designed to improve patient care, explains Henk van Eck, pre-sales engineer at 3Com SA.
The network also supports Microsoft Exchange email and Microsoft Office and will soon enable the hospital to deploy radiology imaging, telemedicine and electronic medical charts -- new revenue-raising services that will significantly improve patient care.
www.itweb.co.za /office/3com/9907141655.htm   (404 words)

  
 Metropolitan Area Network (MAN)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
The Intermediate Systems are connected in a regional network (sometimes also called an Access Network, or Metropolitan Area Network (MAN)).
Many of these networks cover an area the size of a city, or even a whole country.
In some cases they may be as small as a group of buildings or as large as the North of Scotland.
www.erg.abdn.ac.uk /users/gorry/eg3561/intro-pages/isp.html   (231 words)

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