Ver:
· Air gap
· http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sneakernet
SneakerNet es
el término usado (generalmente con intento irónico) para la transferencia de la
información electrónica (fichero electrónico) por los medios desprendibles
físicamente que llevan (cinta magnética, disquetes, discos compactos) a partir
de un ordenador personal a otro. Esto está generalmente en lugar de la
traslación de la información sobre una red de computadoras debido a las
limitaciones del ancho de banda, por motivos de seguridad (para asegurar que el
receptor reciba la información de manera íntegra y exclusiva) o simplemente de
la carencia de una red.
http://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sneakernet
Sneakernet is an
informal term describing the transfer of electronic information, especially
computer files, by physically moving removable media such as magnetic tape,
floppy disks, compact discs, USB flash drives (thumb drives, USB stick), or
external hard drives from one computer to another. This is usually in lieu of
transferring the information over a computer network. The name is a tongue-in-cheek
sound-alike to Ethernet, and refers to the use of someone wearing sneakers as
the transport mechanism for the data.
Sneakernet,
whether called that or not, is often used as an academic example to illustrate
long ping times, and the trade-off between latency and bandwidth.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sneakernet
(D) /slang/ A
process that transfers data between systems only manually, under human control; i.e., a data
transfer process that involves an air gap.
[RFC4949:2007]
Temas relacionados