A SAN typically has its own network of storage devices that are generally not accessible through the local area network by other devices. The cost and complexity of SANs dropped in the early 2000s to levels allowing wider adoption across both enterprise and small to medium-sized business environments. A campus area network (CAN) is made up of an interconnection of LANs within a limited geographical area. The networking equipment (switches, routers) and transmission media (optical fiber, copper plant, Cat5 cabling, etc.) are almost entirely owned by the campus tenant/owner (an enterprise, university, government, etc.). For example, a university campus network is likely to link a variety of campus buildings to connect academic colleges or departments, the library, and student residence halls. A backbone network is part of a computer network infrastructure that provides a path for the exchange of information between different LANs or subnetworks. A backbone can tie together diverse networks within the same building, across different buildings, or over a wide area.
The fact is that this range, still going strong after over a decade, has been the centrepiece of many a productive home studio. It balances strong design with power where it counts, and doesn’t look like an alien in the corner of the desk. We’ve opted for the mid-range Intel i5 version, with 16GB of RAM and a relatively small SSD. You can get less powerful versions, and there are certainly models above this in the range, but for the sweet spot of desktop music production we’d be happy enough with this specification. As we mentioned, for serious computing power you can do a lot worse than look to the gaming community. And, while many in that world prefer to build their own rigs, there is a decent market for ready-to-go computers. The Skytech Legacy 2070 is a great example, packing in the kind of spec that would chew through most audio/music demands. We particularly liked the all-in-one water-cooling feature, which cools the CPU using liquid as well as fans.
SEO, or Search Engine Optimization, is the process of getting quality traffic from free, or organic, search results on the search engines (like Google and Bing). It’s important that the traffic you drive to your website is relevant to your industry. If you manage to attract a high volume of visitors searching for Macintosh computers while what you actually do is selling raincoats, the traffic will do you no good. Some optimization techniques include: researching relevant keywords and including them into your website copy, optimizing your website titles, description and loading speed, building relevant backlinks. Notice how Brian Dean of Backlinko optimizes the blog post for the keyword “SEO strategy for 2022″ by including it in the H1 title and the first paragraph. Initially, the term “search engine marketing” was used as an umbrella term for the process of gaining both paid and free search traffic. Over time, the industry switched to using the term “SEM”, or Search Engine Marketing, solely for paid activities.
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