For a while now, the CAT5/5e standards for twisted-pair cables have been ubiquitous in computer networks. Indeed, home users are often advised to simply use CAT5e cables because they are cheaper than the more advanced CAT6 cables, whose full potential might not be used, anyway. Still, CAT6 cables are becoming more common, and networks are starting to adopt them as a form of "future-proofing".
- Write a brief essay (1-2 pages, not including sources and endnotes) addressing the growing importance of CAT6 Ethernet cabling. Your essay should address the following issues:
- How CAT6 cables are fundamentally different from the older CAT5/5e type -- in terms of both performance and construction.
- Where CAT6 cables are most commonly being used -- and the reasons for it.
- How a user or network administrator can decide whether or not to spend more for CAT6 cables -- and in which areas of the network this should be done.
- Optional: Address the even newer CAT7 standard and its relevance.
NOTE: This does not mean your essay simply answers the above, one after the other. Rather, you should incorporate these in a manner that logically flows from one idea to the next.
- Your 1-2-page essay should meet the following specifications:
- Use at least two sources that are NOT the textbook or lecture notes.
- All sources must be consulted must be explicitly oriented to science, technology, and/or engineering.
- Generic, non-technology-specific encyclopaedias, dictionaries, websites, etc. are not valid sources.
- User-created content -- such as blogs and discussion board posts -- should be vetted for credibility before being used.
- Cite your sources:
- List any sources consulted. These are sources that significantly influenced your thinking or helped you to work out your ideas -- even if you did not take any specific ideas or points from them.
- If you do consult the textbook and/or lecture notes, those must be cited, as well.
- Any direct quotes (or close paraphrasals) -- in other words, where you are using a specific idea or point from a source -- should be surrounded by quotation marks (" ") and cited with endnotes
- There may be some overlap between works consulted and endnotes.
- There are various official citation styles -- MLA, APA, Chicago, etc. Choose one that you know. At the very least, your citation should make it easy for me to find your source -- and place within the source, if applicable.
- Any online source cited must include a URL so that I can easily navigate to it, if needed.
- Correct grammar and spelling
- In paragraph form -- not one large block of text!
- Paragraphs flow logically from one to the next
- Double-spaced
- 12-point font
- 1-inch margins
- To get a broad idea of visual appearance, here is an example: link.
- If you wish, you may include some visual aids (e.g., images, figures, diagrams, graphs, tables, etc.) in order to support your points, subject to the following guidelines:
- These do not count towards your 1-2 pages of content.
- If the visual aids are taken from somewhere else -- rather than being your own creation -- then you must give proper credit with an appropriate citation.
- There is no need to consume several lines at the beginning with information like class, date, etc. Your name will be sufficient.