answersLogoWhite

0

If the hybrid network is designed right, it is the second-best (after full-mesh) topology you can have. A well designed hybrid topology, called so because it combines two or more other network topologies together, strengthens everything you want; speed, reliability, efficiency, etc., and weakens everything else.

Their biggest, really their only, disadvantage is how difficult they can be to design. Hybrids can get so complicated that, no joke, their designers have no clue as to how they work, all they know is that they do work. Their mysterious inner-machinations, or what a mathematician would call a non-linear design, makes them quite hard to troubleshoot, but if they're built right, there won't be any reason to troubleshoot.

User Avatar

Wiki User

14y ago

What else can I help you with?