7.1 Distance Consideration
7.1.1 A WAN is a wide area network that is often used by large businesses or corporations. It is impractical for an organization to own an entirety of a WAN because a WAN is decentralized
It’s l for an organization to own an entire LAN, or local area network, for business expansion purposes. This is control over a dedicated section of the local network that other businesses will want to buy into.
7.1.2 Increasing the required transmission distance of a signal will have a negative effect on the clearness of the signal. As the source is moved farther away from the receiver, a weaker signal will be present
7.1.3
UTP- summary (Short for unshielded twisted pair, a popular type of cable that consists of two …show more content…
Cost and delay of installation are among the limitations.
7.2.2 Data can be transmitted from different devices simultaneously. This topology can withstand high traffic; even if one of the components fails there is always an alternative present. So data transfer doesn’t get affected and Expansion and modification in topology can be done without disrupting other nodes.
Geographical sites can appear on or in a full-mesh topology; the distribution layer allows the core layer to connect sites that run different protocols while.
7.2.3 Hub and spoke networks are well understood by all network administrators, and their benefits are thoroughly documented. They offer a high degree of security because each device on the network is isolated from the others through the single connection to the wireless router. Other benefits include high performance, centralization, and simplicity. They're relatively inexpensive and easy to wire and easy to fix if a component goes down.
It would not be a great choice because if the router dies then the network will go down, in a mesh, if one goes down another can pick up where the other went down.