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Networking Basics: A Primer
Computer networking
is becoming an increasingly important subject. The technology
development shift is in the direction of networking, with telephony,
particularly fast internet connections as a major driving force
behind technology development. In any event the
effects of scale, computer speeds reaching rates which are entirely
satisfactory to most people, and the fact that people are beginning
to accumulate older computer equipment that is not going out of
date quite as quickly, means that more networking is going to be
taking place at the small business and home office level.
The ability to share fast internet connections and set up small
local internet servers (also enabled by the availability of fast
internet connections) will be major area for innovation and development
for small businesses.
The following is intended to convince people
that it is worth saving that old machine, putting it on line in
a local network, and getting a fast internet connection if one is
available in your area. I've set up networks many times now
and set up internet connection sharing also.
It is not hard to do, but it helps if you have an understanding
of the basics.
The Baiscs:
Computers communicate with one another over network connections
(i.e. phone lines and various other kinds of cable/wiring arrangements).
There are two basic kinds of computer network relationships, "peer
to peer" and "server to client." Most small businesses
will use peer to peer configurations since they are the easiest
and cheapest to set up and maintain. Peer to peer basically means
that the computers on the network are capable of running independently
of one another.
The advantage of the network is that files, hard drive space, and
devices like printers can be shared by two or more machines which
are physically remote from one another. That allows several people
in one office to use one printer without having to move around the
room with floppy disks, kick people off of what they are doing on
another machine in order to print something out and such. This arrangement
reduces equipment costs since you can maintain few pieces of printing
equipment.
The Basics To Be Continued
Scenario One
My first computer network came about in 1997.
I set up an office, lugged the furniture, installed the phone systems
(all twice) and built, configured and customized the computers.
We were always compiling data as we went along. We did research
and we compiled it. It was plain old ASCII text - mountains
of it. Dave Briars, a Vermonter who was working with me on
the McLibel trial (www.mclibel.org),
sent me a copy of some DOS software that parsed and indexed ASCII
text. The software has evolved. It’s cheap and it’s
great and they’re really nice helpful folks (www.dtsearch.com).
We began indexing our archive of ASII text.
DTSearch is a powerful tool and I highly recommend it. I was
concerned about hard disk crashes so we began lap-linking the data
and the indexes to another computer. When the office
really got going, we set up a switching network. Three parallel
printer switches, 5 parallel cables and one laplink cable all to
divert data either to one printer or from one to another machine.
This enabled data backups between two machines.
When a third staffer came on board, we got
a new computer. That meant we needed more switches and cables.
Our new staff person wisely insisted that we get a network.
I couldn’t get my mind around how many switches and cables we would
need for the laplink/printer network between three computers and
one printer (you do the math) so we went around the corner and bought
the ethernet cards, the twisted pair cables and the hub and walked
back to the office. Of course I couldn’t get the Win
3.1 network ethernet drivers to install properly so I was at a loss.
On my way back to the computer store I stopped
at the coffee shop to talk to a friend. Some guy at the table
said “Hey, I can do this for you, I’ll come over tomorrow” and bang,
it was done.... no labor cost. Three computers, one printer,
one hub, three ethernet cards and cables and one parallel printer
cable. That was 1996. Now and then something would crash
but we were pretty used to that feature of Windows. We only
had problems with the our client database, which would lose data
if (and only if) the network or data server crashed when a record
was being added or updated. Other stuff, like our archive
and indexes, was pretty secure and was backed up across the network.
As time went on, we added CD burners, tape backup, new Windows operating
systems, and other bells and whistles, but the network continued
as a robust component of our office work environment. We didn’t
need any fancy stuff, no network administrator, no network software.
Scenario Two
In 1999, I set up a network at my fathers
house. He had two computers and his cousin and his had another.
Counting my laptop that made four computers in the house with three
printers. Since all of us had email accounts and we were checking
email and browsing the web for various purposes at various times,
the phone was a big problem. I was big on the
networking concept by then so I went out and bought some network
cards, a hub and cable and installed the network on three computers.
One ethernet card conflicted with the configuration settings of
the computer we were putting it so we replaced the ethernet card
for $25 - problem solved. That network was installed and running
with printer sharing in a three days and I had a left over ethernet
card. This network was the first one where I set up sharing
of a fast internet connection through a linksys four port firewall/hub.
Scenario Three
I immediately moved on to conquer my Mom’s
home office. It only took a few hours to set up.
Two computers, two printers, a firewall/router and a shared cable
modem connection .
Scenario Four
Then came the opportunity to network the
computers in my in-laws house in DC. When I was there,
that meant we had three computers and two printers running.
Needless to say, I felt it was necessary to have a network in this
situation too. So I bought the pieces and installed it.
Counting travel time to buy the equipment - one day.
Scenario Five
I was asked to do a Geographic Information Systems Training program
in Mississippi. The training was designed to empower the staff of
a voting rights organization to build political districts from scratch
using computers, Census 2000 data, and GIS software. I wanted this
group of trainees not only to be able use the software, but also
to become used to using a network to gather data for a project.
This required us to set up a network in the training environment,
someone's living room, over the span of three weeks. This enabled
file sharing, printer sharing and a custom training intranet web
site containing the program agenda, notes, and other stuff - all
available to people from thier own corner of the living room. This
ad-hoc network environment proved the most problematic. One laptop
wouldn't network at all. The problem was insoluble. Another desktop
running Windows ME (a terrible operating system) also wouldn't network.
Those folks had to make do with a CD ROM we passed around. Other
than that, we had 6 computers and two printers set up. It worked
quite well. After three weeks we took most of it apart and put a
piece of it back together in another part of the house. Simple as
can be. |