A 100 MBpsEthernet standard specified to run over four pairs of category 3UTP wires (known as voice grade, hence the "VG"). IT is also called 100VG-AnyLAN because IT was defined to carry both Ethernet and {token ring} {frame} types. 100BaseVG was originally proposed by Hewlett-Packard, ratified by the ISO in 1995 and practically extinct by 1998. 100BaseVG started in the IEEE 802.3u commITtee as {Fast Ethernet}. One faction wanted to keep {CSMA/CD} in order to keep IT pure Ethernet, even though the collision domain problem limITed the distances to one tenth that of 10baseT. Another faction wanted to change to a polling archITecture from the hub (they called IT "demand priorITy") in order to maintain the 10baseT distances, and also to make IT a deterministicprotocol. The CSMA/CD crowd said, "This is 802.3 -- the Ethernet commITtee. If you guys want to make a different protocol, form your own commITtee". The IEEE 802.12 commITtee was thus formed and standardized 100BaseVG. The rest is history. (1998-06-30)