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I know how to wire bothways but I wonder if there is a difference in efficiency between the two, does one standard allow for more bandwidth or something else?

2006-10-22 14:45:24 · 2 answers · asked by argeesoftware 3 in Computers & Internet Hardware Other - Hardware

2 answers

These standards are known as R568A and R568B. They are used to simplify the creation of patch cords known as straight through or crossover cables. To create a straight through cable you would wire R568A on both ends or R568B on both ends. This is known as a straight through cable because the pinouts will be the same on both ends. These cables are used for connecting devices that are not similar such as a PC and a switch. The reason why there are two standards comes into play when you need to create a crossover cable. Crossover cables are used to connect similar devices such as PC to PC. To create a crossover cable you wire a R568A on one end and R568B on the other. It essentially aligns the transmit and receive pinouts for each device otherwise the signal would flow from transmitter to transmitter and receiver to receiver which would get you nowhere. The standards are unrelated to performance which is asociated more with you cable type i.e. CAT3, CAT5, or CAT6.

2006-10-23 05:31:56 · answer #1 · answered by mj21883 2 · 0 0

Actually, the lady who said that an abomination is WAAAAY worse than a sin is biblically wrong. The biblical word translated as abomination simply means something close to not kosher in the original language. Lots of things that we consider OK today are ABOMINATIONS in the Bible. And since God doesn't change, that must mean that he NEVER thought they were sins.

2016-05-21 23:45:26 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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