What is network? To make a network,
you need nodes and connections (sometimes called links) between them. Linking
up the nodes means making some sort of a temporary or permanent connection
between them. In the last decade or so, wireless connections have become one of
the most popular ways of doing this, especially in homes. In offices, wired
connections are still more commonplace—not least because they are generally
faster and more secure and because many newer offices have network cabling
already in place.
Apart from computers, peripherals, and the connections
between them, what else do you need? Each node on a network needs a special
circuit known as a network card (or, more
formally, a network interface card or NIC) to tell it how to interact with the
network. Most new computers have network cards built in as standard. If you
have an older computer or laptop, you may have to fit a separate plug-in
circuit board (or, in a laptop, add a PCMCIA card) to make your machine talk to
a network. Each network card has its own separate numeric identifier, known as
a MAC (media access control) code or LAN
MAC address. A MAC code is a bit like a phone number: any machine on the
network can communicate with another one by sending a message quoting its MAC
code. In a similar way, MAC codes can be used to control which machines on a
network can access files and other shared resources. For example, I've set up
my wireless link to the Internet so that only two MAC codes can ever gain
access to it (restricting access to the network cards built into my two
computers). That helps to stop other people in nearby buildings (or in the
street) hacking into my connection or using it by mistake.
The bigger you make a network, the more extra parts you
need to add to make it function efficiently. Signals can travel only so far
down cables or over wireless links so, if you want to make a big network, you
have to add in devices called repeaters—effectively signal
boosters. You might also need bridges, switches, and routers—devices that help to link together networks (or the parts of
networks, which are known as segments), regulate the traffic between them, and
forward traffic from one part of a network to another part.
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