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WAN Basics

In this Lesson, we’ll discuss the WAN. We’ll start by defining what a WAN is, and then move on to talking about basic technology such as WAN devices and circuit and packet switching. also cover transmission options from POTS (plain old telephone service) to Frame Relay, to leased lines, and more.

Finally, we’ll discuss wide area requirements including a section on minimizing WAN charges with bandwidth optimization features.

Snapshot Routing

By default, routing protocols such as RIP exchange routing tables every 30 seconds. If placed as calls, these routine updates… Read More

WAN Requirements & Solutions

Wide - Area Network Requirements  - Minimize bandwidth costs - Maximize efficiency - Maximize performance - Support new/emerging applications - Maximize availability - Minimize management and maintenance Manage Bandwidth to Control… Read More

Analog services

Analog services are the least expensive type of service. ISDN costs somewhat more but improves performance over even the fastest… Read More

X.25 networks

X.25 Devices X.25 networks implement the internationally accepted ITU-T standard governing the operation of packet switching networks. Transmission links are… Read More

Leased Line and Frame Relay

Leased Line Leased lines are most cost-effective if a customer’s daily usage exceeds four to six hours. Leased lines offer… Read More

Transmission Options

Transmission Options or WAN Services There are a number of transmission options available today. They fall either into the analog… Read More

Circuit, Packet Switching and WAN Protocols

Circuit Switching  - Dedicated physical circuit established, maintained, and terminated through a carrier network for    each communication session - Datagram and data stream… Read More

What Is a WAN?

So, what is a WAN? A WAN is a data communications network that serves users across a broad geographic area… Read More