Science Fair Project Encyclopedia
Hub
In general, a hub is a centre point:
- a wheel's hub, which is the center of the wheel with spokes radiating out from it.
- a node in a network.
- a computer networking device that connects multiple Ethernet segments together making them act as a single segment. When using a hub, every attached device shares the same broadcast domain and the same collision domain. Therefore, only one computer connected to the hub is able to transmit at a time. Depending on the network topology, the hub provides a basic level 1 OSI model connection among the network objects (workstations, servers, etc). It provides bandwidth which is shared among all the objects, compared to switches, which provide a dedicated connection between individual nodes.
- see also Spoke-hub distribution paradigm
- a hub in computer games, is a set of levels that the player can travel back and forth. The levels aren't "restarted" each time, but they are left the same state as when player left them.
- an airline hub is an airport that serves as the base of operations for an airline, usually where most of its flights originate
- the hub is where an aircraft's propellers are attached
- A nickname for the city of Boston, Massachusetts. (From Oliver Wendell Holmes's phrase Hub of the Universe.)
03-10-2013 05:06:04
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The contents of this article is licensed from www.wikipedia.org under the GNU Free Documentation License. Click here to see the transparent copy and copyright details


