A computer network is a telecommunications
network that connects a collection of computers to allow communication and data
exchange between systems, software applications, and users. The computers that
are involved in the network that originate, route and terminate the data are
called nodes. The interconnection of computers is accomplished with a
combination of cable or wireless media and networking hardware.
Two devices are said to be networked when a process
in one device is able to exchange information with a process in another device.
Networks may be classified by various characteristics, such as the media used
to transmit signals, the communications protocols used to organize network
traffic, network scale, network topology and organizational scope. The
best-known computer network is the Internet.
Communication protocols define the rules and data
formats for exchanging information in a computer network. Well-known
communications protocols include Ethernet, a hardware and link layer standard
that is widely used for local
area networks, and the Internet protocol suite (TCP/IP),
which defines a set of protocols for communication between multiple networks,
for host-to-host data transfer, and for application-specific data transmission
formats. Protocols provide the basis for network programming.
Computer networks are created to support many
different sorts of services such as World
Wide Web, file servers, email,
instant messaging and printing.
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