are usually much more accurate and verbose  ;-)

LAT stands for Local Area Transport, a DEC protocol (as indicated). It is
used for communication between a terminal server and a DEC host over a Local
Area Network.  It is bridgeable only (unless encapsulated by TCP/IP).

Kareem - What kind of breakdown of differences do you want for those 5
bridging protocols?  Rossi's Token Ring White Paper at
http://www.ccprep.com/resources/news/archives/Token_Ring2.pdf
gives a pretty short, concise treatment of SRB, DLSw, RSRB, SR/TLB, AND SRT
(Source Route Transparent bridging)

-e-

----- Original Message -----
From: "ElephantChild" 
To: 
Sent: Tuesday, May 22, 2001 9:53 PM
Subject: Re: DLSw+/Source-Route Bridging etc... [7:5497]


> On Tue, 22 May 2001, Kareem Jones wrote:
>
> > Can anyone break down the differences between Source-Route Bridging,
DLSw+,
> > Transparent Bridging, Remote Source-Route Bridging, and Source-Route
> > Translational Bridging?
>
> Have you looked at Internetworking Technology Overview, by the fine
> folks at cisco? It's available online for the price of the Internet
> connection that you appear to have already.
>
> > Also can someone tell me what does LAT mean? And what is it used for?
>
> Local Area (mumble) (Terminal?) It's terminal emulation for Decnet,
> IIRC.
>
> --
> "Someone approached me and asked me to teach a javascript course. I was
> about to decline, saying that my complete ignorance of the subject made
> me unsuitable, then I thought again, that maybe it doesn't, as driving
> people away from it is a desirable outcome." --Me
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