Comment on San Francisco to pay $212 million to end reliance on 5.25-inch floppy disks

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JasonDJ@lemmy.zip ⁨3⁩ ⁨weeks⁩ ago

If it’s stupid and it works, it ain’t stupid.

It comes from a time when wired infra was a shared medium and only one party could talk at a time. To control who talked, they passed around a token. The token would essentially take a lap around the ring before you could speak again.

Because it’s a shared medium, it’s one big collision domain.

Now, collisions are bad, mmmkay.

Modern wired infrastructure is switched. There’s some brains in the operation. The switch learns the hardware ID (unique MAC address) of every device that’s talked to it, because every frame that goes through it has the source and destination hardware ID as part of it.

As such, the switch will only forward out the port where it knows the destination is. It can only know it from one (logical) port (if there’s more than one, that’s a paddlin’). If it doesn’t know it, it’ll forward the frame out all interfaces except the one it rode in on.

Compare this with modern wireless where, aside from 802.11ax, clients just… (essentially) wait for a random amount of time, listen for a break in the signal, and take a leap of faith. It’s amazing anything works on wifi with how much modern homes stress them.

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