Quick Facts about Ethernet FT -- The near-ubiquity of the Ethernet, now 30 years old, illustrates some truths about technology.
- Simple engineering often trumps more elaborate alternatives.
- Open standards, which can be used and developed by anyone, have an advantage over solutions controlled by one company.
- If the Internet is the information superhighway, Ethernet technology is the on-ramp.
- The original Xerox system moved data between computers at a sedate 2.94 megabits per second, roughly a paragraphy per second. The latest versions run at speeds of 10 gigabits, or 10,000 megabits per second.
- Robert Metcalfe named his invention after the "luminiferous ether," the mystical substance once thought to enable propagation of electromagnetic waves through space.
- The Token Ring system developed in the 1980s by IBM was seen as superior by many engineers.
- Intel is building gigabit Ethernet into chipsets for personal computers. The extra speed will faciliate downloading of huge databases, video streams and enable full-screen videoconferences.
Scott Morrison: "Internet's brave little engine gathers speed" in The Financial Times, May 21, 2003 x_ref140
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