Xref: utzoo comp.protocols.misc:1101 comp.os.cpm:4381 alt.folklore.computers:7133 Newsgroups: comp.protocols.misc,comp.os.cpm,alt.folklore.computers Path: utzoo!utgpu!watserv1!sunee!erick From: erick@sunee.waterloo.edu (Erick Engelke) Subject: Re: Early microcomputer networks Message-ID: <1990Nov16.180505.21897@sunee.waterloo.edu> Organization: University of Waterloo References: <1990Nov13.210141.28709@en.ecn.purdue.edu> <1990Nov14.175037.1497@eng.umd.edu> <15686.27426844@levels.sait.edu.au> <2742B8F0.6ED4@marob.masa.com> Date: Fri, 16 Nov 90 18:05:05 GMT Lines: 24 In article <2742B8F0.6ED4@marob.masa.com> cowan@marob.masa.com (John Cowan) writes: etrmg@levels.sait.edu.au (What a Guy!) writes: >>there was another net (by Proteon?) called 10-net ??? I was impressed by that. >>What has happened to it? I could seal off sections of the net and if >>connections where completely broken, you'd have two separately operating systems >>Sounded great, but was $$$. . . > >Proteon 10-Net is an 802.5-style token ring, essentially like IBM Token Ring >but at 10 Mbits/sec rather than 4 or 16. >-- Proteon proNET 10 is still a popular networking product. It's simple to program, has low overhead, and performs faster than 16Mbit IBM Token Ring due to the low amount of overhead. Banyan Vines, Novell and a bunch of other network operating systems all support it. So do quite a few large university networks Watstar (ours is 450 nodes), TCP/IP stuff at Purdue and MIT, and the Free University of Holland (Taunenbaum's home). ProNET 10 is cheaper than IBM Token Ring, and pretty similar to good Ethernet cards. Erick Engelke Systems Manager University of Waterloo