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Starlan Information

StarLAN was the first implementation of 1 megabit per second (1Mb/s) Ethernet over twisted pair wiring. It was standardized by the standards association of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) as 802.3e in 1986, as the 1BASE5 version of Ethernet.

Description

StarLAN was developed by AT&T Corporation around 1984.[1] The name comes from using a star topology for a local area network. The standard known as 1BASE5 was adopted as 802.3e in 1986 by members of the IEEE 802.3 standards committee as the Twisted Pair Medium Specification in section 12.[2] StarLAN ran at a speed of 1 Mbit/s.

A major design goal in StarLAN was the reuse of existing telephony on-premises wiring and compatibility with analog telephone signals in the same cable bundle. The signal modulation and wire pairing used by StarLAN were carefully chosen so that they would not affect or be affected by either the analog signal of a normal call, on hook and off hook transients, or the 20 Hz high-voltage analog ring signal. Reuse of existing wires was critical in many buildings where rewiring was cost prohibitive, or where running new wire would disturb asbestos within the building infrastructure.

The TIA-568B wiring pinout standard was devised for StarLAN, and pair 1 (blue) was left unused to accommodate an analog phone pair. Pairs 2 and 3 (orange and green) carry the StarLAN signals. This greatly simplified the installation of combined voice and data wiring in countries that used registered jack connectors and American wiring practices for their phone service (connecting both to the same cable was a simple matter of using a pin-pin RJ45 splitter or punching down the same wires to two ports). This arrangement prevented harm to private branch exchange (PBX) equipment in the event that a StarLAN cable was plugged into the wrong device.

The technology was patented by AT&T,[3] and was adopted by other networking vendors such as Hewlett-Packard and Ungermann-Bass. Integrated circuits were introduced starting in 1986 that reduced the cost of the interfaces.[4] StarLAN never became popular by itself, but provided the basis for the later 10 megabit per second standard 10BASE-T.

References

  1. ^ Urs von Burg (2001). The triumph of Ethernet: technological communities and the battle for the LAN standard. Stanford University Press. pp. 175–176, 255–256. ISBN 9780804740951. http://books.google.com/books?id=ooBqdIXIqbwC&pg=PA175.
  2. ^ 802.3a,b,c, and e-1988 IEEE Standards for Local Area Networks: Supplements to Carrier Sense Multiple Access With Collision Detection (CSMA/CD) Access Method and Physical Layer Specifications. IEEE Standards Association. 1987. doi:10.1109/IEEESTD.1987.78883. http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/servlet/opac?punumber=2565.
  3. ^ US 4674085 Patent "Local area network" William L. Aranguren, Mario A. Restrepo, and Michael J. Sidney, Filed October 6, 1986, issued June 16, 1987.
  4. ^ Mary Petrosky (June 9, 1986). "Starlan nets: Chip set chips away at Interface cost". Network World 3 (14): p. 4. http://books.google.com/books?id=aBwEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA4. Retrieved June 10, 2011.
· · Ethernet family of local area network technologies
Speeds 10 Mbits/sec: (10BASE5, 10BASE2, 10BASE-T) • 100 Mbits/secGigabit/sec10 Gigabits/sec100 Gigabits/secTerabit/sec
General IEEE 802.3Physical layerAutonegotiationPower over EthernetEtherTypeEthernet AllianceFlow controlFramesJumbos
Historic CSMA/CDStarLAN10BROAD3610BASE-FB10BASE-FL100BaseVGLattisNetLong Reach
Applications IndustrialCarrierAudioFirst mileData centerEnergy Efficiency
Transceivers MAUGBICSFPXAUIXENPAKXFPSFP+CFP
Interfaces AUIMedium dependent interfaceMedia Independent InterfaceGigabit Media Independent Interface10 Gigabit Media Independent InterfaceXAUI
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