Upgrading & Fixing Laptops DUMmIES

(Darren Dugan) #1

Networking Other Ways ..............................................................................


I’ve exhaustively explored wireless communications. (I know I’m tired of the
subject, and I suspect by now so are you.) And I’ve touched on traditional
wired Ethernet networks, which connect laptops and desktops to each other
through a central hub. Just for the record, you have a few other means of
interconnection of machines.

The original quick-and-easy means to transfer files from one machine to another
earned the nickname of sneakernet.This high-tech process involved copying
files to a floppy disk on one machine and then carrying the disk to where the
files could be uploaded and used. Sneakernets have evolved a bit: You can burn
a CD-R on one machine and bring about 600MB of data, photos, or music to
another machine in that way. You can also use a tiny flash disk, which is a form
of non-volatile RAM; various makers now package as much as several gigabytes
of memory in another one of those USB lip balm-like packages. These sticks of
memory can be formatted as if they were hard drives and carried from one
machine to another. (Chapter 9 talks about these things at length.)

Hub

Laptop

WiFi-equipped
printer

Desktop PC

PDA

Cable/DSL Modem

Broadband internet connection

Access Point

Router

Figure 14-1:
A wireless
system is
based
around an
access
point, which
is the
transmitter/
receiver
device.

220 Part IV: Failing to Communicate

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