
Once-upon-a-time this LAN ran in the high speed networking race...
Published: 23 November 2001 10:15 GMT
With the advent of server processors like Digital's Alpha and Intel's PCI internal bus technology in the early nineties, the network began to bottleneck at the hub, and sharing 10Mbps on an Ethernet LAN was simply not an option anymore.
The logical step was to rack up the bandwidth by, say, ten times?
100BaseT was the natural successor to 10BaseT, but to everyone's surprise AT&T, HP and IBM decided to rustle up a young pretender to the standard in 1995.
Dubbed VG(Voice Grade) AnyLan, HP et al boasted it would usher in a new way of networking for the multimedia age.
It was called AnyLan because it would run both Ethernet and IBM's baby, Token Ring. It would, it followed, allow network managers to migrate to the cheaper Ethernet, without having to junk heir Token Ring installed base.
It also boasted Demand Priority Media Access (DPMA) which would give a higher priority to specified traffic.
HP and its collaborators insisted that there was no 'holy war' and both VGAnyLan and 100BaseT, soon dubbed Fast Ethernet, could co-exist in the same world.
Sadly this proved not to be true, for while network managers flocked to Fast Ethernet to cater for user demands for bandwidth, they stayed away from VG AnyLan in droves.
AnyLan was cool but it was too far removed from the 802.3 Ethernet standard to justify ripping out a lot of installed base and upgrading to Category 5 structured cabling. It was not a practical solution.
Token Ring was fighting a losing battle and AnyLan's protocol flexibility proved an insufficient draw.
That left media prioritisation. Most companies struggled to find a reason to justify running bandwidth hungry applications which demanded continuous network access and so DPMA failed to become a selling point.
HP and its collaborators quietly forgot about breaking Ethernet's monopoly on the network and turned to simpler things like hardware and wide area services.
Meanwhile the network grew again, to 1Gbt and soon 10Gbt, DWDM, Fiber Channel, WiFi, Bluetooth....
Now it's your turn. If you used - or still use - VGAnyLan or rival, non-Ethernet technologies we want to hear from you. Or perhaps you sold (resold) products based on the network protocol. What are you memories? Has it rightly been thrown into the dustbin of history or is it another superior technology that lost out to an inferior rival with a bigger marketing budget? To have your say click 'Add Comment' below or email editorial@silicon.com
And if you know of a technology/product worthy of this column let us know
For related links, see
Technologies that time forgot: 3Com's 3+Open
http://www.silicon.com/a48721
Want to use silicon.com articles on your site? Go to http://www.silicon.com/feeds/index.htm
This is an exciting time for my client as their commodities business is continuing to increase and this fast-growing initiative has became a top ...
This role includes: - Performing an active role in the delivery of a continuous service improvement programme Strategic R&D. Excellent experience ...
Initially you will work on the Bloomberg/DTC and Clearstream issuance process automation, which has tight deadlines and is high priority. You will be ...
CIO50 2008
The silicon.com CIO50 2008 profiles the most influential and innovative tech chiefs in the UK across all industries and organisation size, from the biggest FTSE100 companies to high growth dot-com start ups and the public sector. The list was voted on by the UK CIO community and a panel of experts. Find out more in our latest special report.
Stories from the web...
Copyright ©1995-2008 CNET Networks, Inc. All rights reserved. Top of page
Natasha Lomas iPhone nano: Fact or fiction? Apple's game will keep us guessing...
Peter Cochrane Peter Cochrane's Blog: New niche for 3G? ADSL costs could drive 3G uptake...