A network is like a group of friends who all talk to each other, and when you have more than one such group talking to each other, that's an interconnected network.
Imagine your toy box has two different sets of blocks. One set is red blocks that stack really high, and the other set is blue blocks that make cool shapes. Each set of blocks is like a network, because all the blocks in one set work together. But if you connect them, say by using green blocks as bridges, now both groups are working together! That’s an interconnected network.
How They Work Together
In a normal network, like your red blocks, each block might only talk to its neighbors. But when you have interconnected networks, like the red and blue blocks with green bridges, messages (or toys) can travel from one group to another, just like how you can pass a toy from one friend to another across the room.
This is super useful in real life too! For example, your phone uses different networks to send messages, play games, and show videos, all connected together so everything works smoothly. A network is like a group of friends who all talk to each other, and when you have more than one such group talking to each other, that's an interconnected network.
Imagine your toy box has two different sets of blocks. One set is red blocks that stack really high, and the other set is blue blocks that make cool shapes. Each set of blocks is like a network, because all the blocks in one set work together. But if you connect them, say by using green blocks as bridges, now both groups are working together! That’s an interconnected network.
Examples
- A city with roads that connect every neighborhood together.
- A set of computers linked so they can share files.
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See also
- What are nodes?
- What are new connections?
- What is interconnected?
- Who is Network Formation?
- What is distributed?