2. PERSONAL AREA NETWORK(PAN)
• A PERSONAL AREA NETWORK IS A NETWORK CONCERNED WITH
THE EXCHANGE OF INFORMATION IN THE VICINITY OF A PERSON.
TYPICALLY, THESE SYSTEMS ARE WIRELESS AND INVOLVE THE
TRANSMISSION OF DATA BETWEEN DEVICES SUCH AS
SMARTPHONES, PERSONAL COMPUTERS, TABLET COMPUTERS,
ETC. THE PURPOSE OF SUCH A NETWORK IS USUALLY TO ALLOW
EITHER TRANSMISSION OF DATA OR INFORMATION BETWEEN SUCH
DEVICES OR TO SERVER AS THE NETWORK THAT ALLOWS FURTHER
UP LINK TO THE INTERNET.
3. • IT IS AN INTERCONNECTION OF PERSONAL TECHNOLOGY DEVICES
TO COMMUNICATE OVER A SHORT DISTANCE, WHICH IS LESS
THAN 33 FEET OR 10 METERS OR WITHIN THE RANGE OF AN
INDIVIDUAL PERSON, TYPICALLY USING SOME FORM OF
WIRELESS TECHNOLOGIES.
4.
5. LOCAL AREA NETWORK (LAN)
A LAN is a computer network that consists of access
points, cables, routers, and switches that enable devices to
connect to web servers and internal servers within a single
building, campus, or home network, and to other LANs via
Wide Area Networks (WAN) or Metropolitan Area Network
(MAN). Devices on a LAN, typically personal computers
and workstations, can share files and be accessed by each
other over a single Internet connection.
6.
7. WIRELESS LOCAL AREA NETWORK (WLAN)
•Stands for "Wireless Local Area Network." A WLAN, or
wireless LAN, is a network that allows devices to
connect and communicate wirelessly. Unlike a
traditional wired LAN, in which devices communicate
over Ethernet cables, devices on a WLAN communicate
via Wi-Fi.
8. •While a WLAN may look different than a traditional LAN,
it functions the same way. New devices are typically
added and configured using DHCP. They can
communicate with other devices on the network the
same way they would on a wired network. The primary
difference is how the data is transmitted. In a LAN, data is
transmitted over physical cables in a series of
Ethernet packets. In a WLAN, packets are transmitted
over the air.
9.
10. CAMPUS AREA NETWORK (CAN)
•A campus area network (CAN) is a computer
network that spans a limited geographic area.
CANs interconnect multiple local area networks
(LAN) within an educational or corporate campus.
Most CANs connect to the public Internet.
11. •CANs are smaller than metropolitan area networks
(MAN) and wide area networks (WAN), which
stretch over large geographic areas. Typically, the
organization that owns the campus also owns and
operates all the networking equipment and
infrastructure for the CAN. In contrast, MANs and
WANs may combine infrastructure operated by
several different providers.
12.
13. Leader: John Mark Tubo
Member: Frincess Bacay
Julie Ann cantos
Cristel Faith Gabia