In computer networking, an uplink is a connection from a device or smaller local network to a larger network.An uplink port is a port set aside for you to connect one piece of networking equipment to another (as opposed to a server or client computer). 10Mbps is about ten times slower than 100 Mbps. Mbps is MegaBits Per Second, so every eight seconds the equivalent Mega Byte is transferred.
Put another way, there are 8 bits to a byte, 1024 bytes to a kilobyte and 1024 kilobytes to a megabyte. 100 Mbits = 100/8 MBytes = 12.4 MBytes/sec; 10 Mb = 1.24 MB/sec.
Some Ethernet computer networking equipment contains an uplink port. These ports simplify connecting different types of Ethernet devices to each other, such as when linking a local home network to a modem and the Internet.
A special networking port on a hub or switch that is used to connect it to a larger network. Often you need a special crossover cable to make this connection function properly. If you think of a network as a tree, the hub (or switch) on top connects to the uplink ports of the hubs (or switches) below it, and so on.
Put another way, there are 8 bits to a byte, 1024 bytes to a kilobyte and 1024 kilobytes to a megabyte. 100 Mbits = 100/8 MBytes = 12.4 MBytes/sec; 10 Mb = 1.24 MB/sec.
Some Ethernet computer networking equipment contains an uplink port. These ports simplify connecting different types of Ethernet devices to each other, such as when linking a local home network to a modem and the Internet.
A special networking port on a hub or switch that is used to connect it to a larger network. Often you need a special crossover cable to make this connection function properly. If you think of a network as a tree, the hub (or switch) on top connects to the uplink ports of the hubs (or switches) below it, and so on.
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