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Motherboard of the NeXTcube from 1990 having a Motorola 68040 (25 MHz) and a digital signal processor Motorola 56001 with 25 MHz which was directly accessible via an interface. In most designs the 56000 is dedicated to one single task, because digital signal processing using special hardware is mostly real-time and does not allow any interruption .
Networking hardware typically refers to equipment facilitating the use of a computer network. Typically, this includes routers, switches, access points, network interface cards and other related hardware. This is a list of notable vendors who produce network hardware.
20 or 44 10/100 port switches with two models supportingPoE functionality, and 4 x Dual Personality Ports (2 x Gb or SFPs). [4] [5] 20 or 44 Gb port switch with PoE functionality, and 4 x Dual Personality Ports (2 x Gb or SFPs). Also capable of supporting 10GE ports. CPU Motorola PowerPC MPC8245 @266 MHz MIPS @264 MHz Freescale PowerPC 8540 ...
Canopy – A line-of-sight wireless technology, primarily used by ISPs to provide broadband internet; MotoMESH – A mobile wireless broadband product providing proprietary "Mesh-Enabled Architecture" and standards-based 802.11 network access in both the unlicensed 2.4 GHz band and the licensed 4.9 GHz public-safety band
PowerQUICC is the name for several PowerPC- and Power ISA-based microcontrollers from Freescale Semiconductor.They are built around one or more PowerPC cores and the Communications Processor Module (QUICC Engine) which is a separate RISC core specialized in such tasks such as I/O, communications, ATM, security acceleration, networking and USB.
In 1994, Motorola re-organized ISG and combined Codex with Universal Data Systems products. The new group was called the Internet and Networking Group, [9] with John Lockitt remaining president and chief executive of Motorola Codex. [10] After the dot-com bubble collapse in 2000, Motorola was forced to close or sell off some of their own ...
Provisioning – Configuration of the device (including first time use), enabling and disabling features; Device Configuration – Allow changes to settings and parameters of the device; Software Upgrades – Provide for new software and/or bug fixes to be loaded on the device, including applications and system software
A DSL modem, which is type of customer-premises equipment. The WAN interface of this device, in this case the DSL port, could expose CWMP to the internet service provider . Technical Report 069 ( TR-069 ) is a document by the Broadband Forum that specifies the CPE WAN Management Protocol ( CWMP ).