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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 3 page paper discussing the design of a network that does not need Internet access. The company should consider establishing a thin client, three-tier client/server system relying on servers networked within a TCP/IP environment. The information that needs to be shared across the business can reside on servers to which everyone can have access, and the company will need to make few alterations when it ultimately decides that it does need Internet access, after all. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: CC6_KSitNewNet2.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
that a company occupies two buildings adjacent to each other and wished to network the more than 10,000 computers housed in the two buildings. The company does not need
Internet access and appears not to want it. The purpose here is to create an internal network for the company. Considerations Beyond the Immediate
First off, the fact that the company does not want Internet access now is not an indication that it will not want Internet access later. Despite not
wanting Internet access, it may be that an intranet solution would be most beneficial for the company. Beyond the questions of what the
system should do also are those of how it should accomplish those ends. As example, if the company has many users, it can be more cost effective to use
the thin client, three-tier approach rather than buying many PCs capable of supplying all processing needs, then adding an applications server to balance the deficiencies. It is also more
efficient to update applications on a single server than on many client machines if users are dispersed over a wide area. Smaller organizations or individual departments may find it
more cost effective to operate only a database server in a two-tier system while providing users with client machines with greater capabilities. Recommended Approach
Now an "old" technology, Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol (TCP/IP) has been in use for more than 20 years and keeps being relevant to changing environments, usually just when it
has been counted as a protocol that likely will not survive the next generation of technological advances. The truth is that even though applications, hardware and possible speeds of
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