smb@ulysses.UUCP (Steven Bellovin) (04/16/86)
We're planning on ordering some DEC DELUAs for some new machines, to save slots, power, etc., over the older DEUNA. The good folks at the DEC Technical Hotline assure me that the two are program-compatible, etc. However... The DEC catalogs I have say that the DELUA is compatible with both Ethernet 2.0 and IEEE 802.3, whereas I had thought that the difference was just in the packet format (i.e., the type field vs. the length). Furthermore, they say that the DEUNA is not compatible with IEEE 802.3. And they have a different transceiver cable for 802.3 use than for Ethernet use. Can anyone explain what's really going on? (While you're at it, we're also ordering DEC H4005-A transceivers; these -- the replacements for the H4000s -- are also claimed to be 802.3 and Ethernet compatible, whereas the H4000s are alleged to be Ethernet-only. If we have a DELUA and a H4005-A, to talk to an existing Ethernet, which transceiver cable do we use?) Please reply by mail; I'll post any answers that seem helpful. --Steve Bellovin AT&T Bell Laboratories {ucbvax,unc,ihnp4,allegra, most of BTL}!ulysses!smb