Aloha Net - meaning and definition. What is Aloha Net
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What (who) is Aloha Net - definition

COMPUTER NETWORKING SYSTEM
ALOHA network; Aloha protocol; ALOHA; Slotted Aloha; Slotted ALOHA; ALOHANET; ALOHNET; Pure aloha in computer network; ALOHA protocol; ALOHA System

Aloha Net      
<networking> (From the Hawaiian greeting) One of the first functioning networks in the USA, conceived and implimented at the University of Hawaii campus at Manoa. Its purpose was to link the University mainframe computer to client computers located on outer islands at University campuses. Put in place in the early 1970s, it was dubed the Aloha Net. Key punch cards were fed through a reader, and sent over the commercial phone lines. (1995-12-10)
Mobile Slotted Aloha         
Mobile Slotted ALOHA (MS-Aloha)
Mobile Slotted Aloha (MS-Aloha) is a wireless network protocol proposed for applications such as vehicle networks.
Aloha ʻOe         
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  • Queen Liliʻuokalani, 1908
SONG BY LILI'UOKALANI, PRINCESS OF THE HAWAIIAN KINGDOM
Aloha Oe; Aloha oe; Aloha 'Oe; 'Aloha 'Oe'; Aloha `Oe; Farewell to Thee; Aloha oh; Alo Hawaii
"Aloha ʻOe" (Farewell to Thee) is a Hawaiian folk song written circa 1878 by Liliʻuokalani, who was then Princess of the Hawaiian Kingdom. It is her most famous song and is a common cultural symbol for Hawaii.

Wikipedia

ALOHAnet

ALOHAnet, also known as the ALOHA System, or simply ALOHA, was a pioneering computer networking system developed at the University of Hawaii. ALOHAnet became operational in June 1971, providing the first public demonstration of a wireless packet data network. ALOHA originally stood for Additive Links On-line Hawaii Area.

The ALOHAnet used a new method of medium access, called ALOHA random access, and experimental ultra high frequency (UHF) for its operation. In the 1970s ALOHA random access was employed in the nascent Ethernet cable based network and then in the Marisat (now Inmarsat) satellite network.

In the early 1980s frequencies for mobile networks became available, and in 1985 frequencies suitable for what became known as Wi-Fi were allocated in the US. These regulatory developments made it possible to use the ALOHA random-access techniques in both Wi-Fi and in mobile telephone networks.

ALOHA channels were used in a limited way in the 1980s in 1G mobile phones for signaling and control purposes. In the late 1980s, the European standardization group GSM who worked on the Pan-European Digital mobile communication system GSM greatly expanded the use of ALOHA channels for access to radio channels in mobile telephony. In addition, SMS message texting was implemented in 2G mobile phones. In the early 2000s additional ALOHA channels were added to 2.5G and 3G mobile phones with the widespread introduction of General Packet Radio Service (GPRS), using a slotted-ALOHA random-access channel combined with a version of the Reservation ALOHA scheme first analyzed by a group at BBN Technologies.