A group of members more than 390,000 IT professionals from around 150 countries planned to introduce the 40 Gigabit Ethernet technology in July 2006. This group known as the IEEE or the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers was liable for the Ethernet standards that brought us the top data transfer technology known to man.
As of now, we are motionless dependent on their 10 gigabit Ethernet (10GbE) technology for our data exchange needs. What the IEEE aims for was to increase this routine for up to 4 and 10 times. After almost a year of study, the project was seen greatly favorable, and so a mission force was assembled to take charge.
A label of 802.3ba, following the original 802.3, was given to the project. And its primary goal was to be able to distribute speed standards 40GbE and 100GbE, both greater than the 10GbE. There are two speed rates, as to be able to gratify to both small sever needs like home offices (40GbE) and large server demands like that of the internet (100GbE).
Although there are already 40 Gigabit technology being implemented by means of combining four 10GbE technologies into a single mode, the aspired 40GbE is completely dissimilar. The latest 40GbE will be molded into just one individual figure, like a 10GbE network technology with wider capabilities.
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