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4500 Great America Parkway  • Santa Clara, CA 95054 

 

 

 

Small Business Stackable Switch White Paper January 16, 2001 

 

Today’s fast-paced global business arena, spurred by the Internet and 
World Wide Web (WWW), has changed the ground rules for small offices, 
requiring them to work faster, be more responsive to customers, and 
outpace a worldwide range of competitors. At the same time, the Internet 
and WWW have also provided new ways for small offices to not only 

survive 

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 but thrive 

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 in these market conditions. 

 

To take advantage of today’s unprecedented opportunities, small offices 
are deploying larger networks, higher-performance personal computers 
(PCs) and servers, and resource-hungry client/server applications that 
consume large amounts of bandwidth to support Internet- and/or intranet-
based customer transactions or other business activities. At the same 
time, small offices are facing the growing challenge of providing users 
with sufficient bandwidth to perform day-to-day activities such as: 

• Accessing e-mail, the Internet, and the company intranet 

• Fetching image-enhanced documents 

• Accessing graphics-intensive files 

• Conducting unified voice/data messaging and Internet telephony 
activities 

 
Stackable switch technology offers a solution for improving network 
performance, relieving bandwidth bottlenecks, while allowing small 
offices to preserve their investment in their current network 
infrastructure. Stackable switch technology also offers advantages in 
performance and provides the framework for utilizing evolving 
technologies, such as Gigabit Ethernet, as they become available. 

 
This White Paper explains stackable switching technology, its origins, 
and its advantages. This Paper also identifies the features to look for 
in a stackable switch. 

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