Netgear FS524S Whitepaper - Page 3
research firm in San Jose, CA, found that the deployment
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Trend mpact Deploying highperformance PCs as clients and servers Today's Pentium III-based clients and servers can place significant amounts of information on the network. Increasing reliance on client/server solutions The avalanche of IP traffic Dramatic rise in backbone traffic Architectural shifts Consolidating networks More and more applications are being installed on servers rather than on desktop PCs, greatly increasing the amount of traffic on the network. At the same time, the applications themselves are requiring greater bandwidth. This trend will accelerate as small offices increase their reliance on resource-intensive applications such as distributed data bases, e-mail supporting multimedia attachments, CAD, audio and video transmissions, groupware and push technologies. The increasing dependency on the Internet and intranets as business tools means that large files are uploaded and downloaded frequently over the network. In fact, the widespread popularity with the Internet and Web browserbased applications has made IP the primary protocol on the small-business intranet. In the past, data traffic flow within the workplace followed the "80/20 rule," which held that 80% of network traffic stayed within the workgroup and only 20% was traffic to and from the server. In a recent survey, Dataquest, a marketresearch firm in San Jose, CA, found that the deployment of applications on the server, coupled with the increasing use of intranets and the Internet, has inverted the 80/20 rule, with 80% of the network traffic making it to the server and only 20% remaining local. The trend of deploying "thin clients" ? desktop devices equipped with a minimum of computing power ? places an additional strain on network capacities. Thin clients need to contact the server continuously, not only to download the initial applications, but also for applets that change fonts or create tables. As older technologies are phased out within an organization and those legacy users migrate to Ethernet, the number of people sharing Ethernet bandwidth increases. 3