News

In the last newsletter we started discussing the protocol stack used for transporting voice over IP. Today we’ll move to the control for those conversations.
Those who have had a little experience will probably have heard of TCP (transmission control protocol) and UDP (user datagram protocol). They are transport protocols that run over IP links, and they ...
Resurrecting UDP The sibling of TCP is called UDP, and it isn’t necessarily designed to play well with others. As a very simple, low-level internet protocol, at least when compared to TCP, the UDP ...
Port numbers are used in several protocols, but perhaps most importantly in Transport Control Protocol (TCP) and User Datagram Protocol (UDP). The concept of port numbers originates from the time when ...
This paper seeks to reflect a comparative analysis between the two transport layer protocols, which are TCP/IP and UDP/IP, as well to observe the effect of using these two protocols in a client ...
EtherNet/IP adapts CIP to work with key elements of standard Ethernet (IEEE 802.3 combined with the Internet Engineering Task Force’s TCP/UDP/IP suite). For example, it uses the transfer control ...
Next, you learn about the 4-layer IP stack and differences between the transport-layer protocols Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) and User Datagram Protocol (UDP).
UDP? TCP? I know you are getting confused, but I promise I will explain this in very basic terms so that you can understand this concept. TCP stands for Transmission Control Protocol.
What is TCP, anyway? TCP stands for Transmission Control Protocol, a set of rules which defines how computers communicate across networks.
Google today announced plans to formally propose its network protocol Quick UDP Internet Connections (QUIC) to the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF). In other words, the company wants to make ...