StarLAN
StarLAN was the first implementation of
Ethernet computer networking on
twisted pair wiring.
Developed in the mid
1980s by Tim Rock, Richard Bennett, Pat Thaler, and other members of the
IEEE 802.3 standards committee, StarLAN ran at a speed of 1Mbit/s. This version of the standard was known as 1BASE5. It was adopted by other networking vendors such as
Hewlett-Packard and
Ungermann-Bass.
StarLAN provided the basis for the later standard
10BASE-T. With the addition of
link beat, a feature to easily detect whether or not a cable was connected, and later full-duplex, a feature that enabled systems to transmit and receive at the same time, StarLAN's basic
modulation scheme became 10BASE-T.
A major design goal in the StarLAN technologies was compatibility with analog
telephone signals in the same cable bundle. The signal modulation and wire pairing used by StarLAN were carefully chosen so that they would not affect or be affected by either the analog signal of a normal call or the 20Hz high-voltage analog ring signal.
The
TIA-568B wiring pinout standard was chosen, and pair 1 (blue) was left unused to accommodate an analog phone pair. Pairs 2 and 3 (orange and green) carry the StarLAN signals. This greatly simplified the installation of combined voice and data wiring in countries that used
Registered jack connectors and american wiring practices for their phone service (connecting both to the same cable was a simple matter of using a pin-pin RJ45 splitter or punching down the same wires to two ports). This was considered revolutionary in 1984.