The Structured Cabling Company Directory
Network Cabling Systems and Solution Providers

Networking Articles


Networking and IT related articles are provided for your information.

If you would like to submit an article to this directory, please send the complete document to "articles @ structuredcablingcompany.co.uk" for approval.

Note: The articles must be unique content, and they will be checked for originality using CopyScape. We will allow one back link per article to the authors website.

Article 1 - Cat 7 Structured Cabling Systems

Article 2 -
Advanced Products for Building Markets

Article 3 -
The Revolutionary Cabling System

Article 4 - Network Security Top Tips

Article 5 - Warehouse Security

Article 6 - Top Tips for Wireless Networking

Article 7 - Wireless in Hospitality

Article 8 - Wireless Application Integrity

Article 9 - Blocking Outgoing Telephone Calls

Article 10 -

Article 11 -

Structured Cabling and IP Network Services
Structured cabling design and installation is governed by a set of standards that specify wiring data centers, offices, and apartment buildings for data or voice communications, using category 5 (CAT 5E) or category 6 cable (CAT 6E) and modular sockets. These standards define how to lay the cabling in a star formation, such that all outlets terminate at a central patch panel (which is normally 19 inch rack-mounted), from where it can be determined exactly how these connections will be used. Each outlet can be 'patched' into a data network switch (normally also rack mounted alongside), or patched into a 'telecoms patch panel' which forms a bridge into a private branch exchange (PBX) telephone system, thus making the connection a voice port. The latest standard from the TIA for enhanced performance standards for twisted pair cable systems was defined in February 2008 in ANSI/TIA/EIA-568-B.2-10. Category 6a (or Augmented Category 6) is defined at frequencies up to 500 MHz—twice that of Cat. 6. Category 6a performs at improved specifications, particularly in the area of alien crosstalk as compared to Cat 6 UTP which exhibited high alien noise in high frequencies. Category 7 cable (Cat 7), (ISO/IEC 11801:2002 category 7/class F), is a cable standard for Ethernet and other interconnect technologies that can be made to be backward compatible with traditional Cat 5 and Cat 6 Ethernet cable. Cat 7 features even more strict specifications for crosstalk and system noise than Cat 6.
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