0% found this document useful (0 votes)
133 views

CH 08

TELECOMMUNICATIONS AND NETWORKS (c) 2002 by Prentice Hall LEARNING OBJECTIVES DESCRIBE COMPONENTS of TELECOMPUNICATIONS system CALCULATE capacity of TELECOMMUNICATIONS CHANNELS and EVALUATE TRANSMISSION MEDIA. MANAGEMENT CHALLENGES MANAGING LOCAL AREA NETWORKS: Must be carefully administered, monitored, vulnerable to interruption

Uploaded by

suhani_17
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
133 views

CH 08

TELECOMMUNICATIONS AND NETWORKS (c) 2002 by Prentice Hall LEARNING OBJECTIVES DESCRIBE COMPONENTS of TELECOMPUNICATIONS system CALCULATE capacity of TELECOMMUNICATIONS CHANNELS and EVALUATE TRANSMISSION MEDIA. MANAGEMENT CHALLENGES MANAGING LOCAL AREA NETWORKS: Must be carefully administered, monitored, vulnerable to interruption

Uploaded by

suhani_17
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 39

c h a p t e r

8
TELECOMMUNICATIONS
AND NETWORKS

8.1 © 2002 by Prentice Hall


LEARNING OBJECTIVES

• DESCRIBE COMPONENTS OF
TELECOMMUNICATIONS SYSTEM
• CALCULATE CAPACITY OF
TELECOMMUNICATIONS CHANNELS
& EVALUATE TRANSMISSION MEDIA
• COMPARE TYPES OF
NETWORKS &
NETWORK SERVICES
8.2 * © 2002 by Prentice Hall
LEARNING OBJECTIVES

• COMPARE ALTERNATIVE NETWORK


SERVICES
• IDENTIFY APPLICATIONS FOR
SUPPORTING ELECTRONIC
COMMERCE, BUSINESS
*

8.3 © 2002 by Prentice Hall


MANAGEMENT CHALLENGES

• TELECOMMUNICATIONS REVOLUTION
• COMPONENTS, FUNCTIONS OF
TELECOMMUNICATIONS SYSTEM
• COMMUNICATIONS NETWORKS
• ELECTRONIC COMMERCE &
ELECTRONIC BUSINESS TECHNOLOGIES
*

8.4 © 2002 by Prentice Hall


MANAGEMENT CHALLENGES

1. MANAGING LOCAL AREA NETWORKS:


Must be carefully administered, monitored,
vulnerable to interruption, data loss,
viruses
2. MANAGING BANDWIDTH: While costs per
unit are dropping and capacity is growing,
sudden demand can overwhelm system

*
8.5 © 2002 by Prentice Hall
TELECOMMUNICATIONS

COMMUNICATING INFORMATION
VIA ELECTRONIC MEANS
OVER SOME DISTANCE
*

8.6 © 2002 by Prentice Hall


INFORMATION SUPERHIGHWAY

NATIONAL / WORLDWIDE
HIGH SPEED
DIGITAL TELECOMMUNICATIONS
ACCESSIBLE BY GENERAL PUBLIC
*

8.7 © 2002 by Prentice Hall


SYSTEM COMPONENTS
• COMPUTERS
• TERMINALS: Input / output devices
• COMMUNICATIONS CHANNELS
• PROCESSORS: Modems, multiplexers,
front-end processors
• COMMUNICATIONS
SOFTWARE
*

8.8 © 2002 by Prentice Hall


PROTOCOL

RULES & PROCEDURES


TO GOVERN TRANSMISSION
BETWEEN COMPONENTS
IN A NETWORK

8.9 © 2002 by Prentice Hall


ANALOG SIGNAL
• CONTINUOUS WAVEFORM
• PASSES THRU SYSTEM
• VOICE COMMUNICATIONS
*

8.10 © 2002 by Prentice Hall


DIGITAL SIGNAL
• DISCRETE WAVEFORM
• TWO DISCRETE STATES:
– 1-BIT & 0-BIT
– ON / OFF PULSE
• DATA COMMUNICATION
• USES MODEM TO TRANSLATE
ANALOG TO DIGITAL, DIGITAL TO
ANALOG
*
0010111010011101001010101110111100100010000101111010
01101100
8.11 © 2002 by Prentice Hall
COMMUNICATION CHANNELS

MEANS BY WHICH DATA ARE


TRANSMITTED:
• TWISTED WIRES: Copper Wires
• COAXIAL CABLE: Insulated Copper
Wires
• FIBER-OPTIC CABLE
• MICROWAVE
*
8.12 © 2002 by Prentice Hall
FIBER OPTICS

SUPER CLEAR GLASS STRANDS

FAST, LIGHT, DURABLE

TRILLIONS OF BITS PER SECOND, FULL
DUPLEX
• EXPENSIVE, HARDER TO INSTALL
• OFTEN USED AS BACKBONE OF
NETWORKS
SIGNAL LASER *
CABLE
PHOTO
SIGNAL
DETECTOR

8.13 © 2002 by Prentice Hall


FIBER OPTICS
• BACKBONE: Fiber optics cable carries
light signals to distribution nodes, which
use copper wires to user
• DENSE WAVE DIVISION MULTIPLEXING
(DWDM): Next-generation, uses many
colors, (up to 160) each a channel,
increases capacity of a fiber to 6.4 terabits
per second
*

8.14 © 2002 by Prentice Hall


WIRELESS TRANSMISSION
TECHNOLOGIES

• PAGERS: Small pager beeps when


receives short message
• CELLULAR TELEPHONE: Device
uses radio waves to reach antennas
within areas called cells
• MOBILE DATA NETWORKS: Radio -
based data network using hand-held
computers, cheap, efficient
8.15 * © 2002 by Prentice Hall
WIRELESS TRANSMISSION
TECHNOLOGIES
• PERSONAL COMMUNICATION SERVICE:
Cellular; lower power; higher frequency.
Smaller phones not shielded by buildings,
tunnels
• PERSONAL DIGITAL ASSISTANT:
Pen sized, hand-held, digital
communicator
• SMART PHONE: Wireless, voice, text,
Internet
*
8.16 © 2002 by Prentice Hall
ORBITING SATELLITES

MICROWAVE
TRANSMISSION

UPLINK
DOWNLINK

8.17 © 2002 by Prentice Hall


COMMUNICATIONS CHANNELS

• TRANSMISSION SPEED: Bits per


Second (BPS) or Baud
• BANDWIDTH: Capacity of Channel;
Difference between Highest &
Lowest Frequencies
*

8.18 © 2002 by Prentice Hall


SPEEDS & COST OF MEDIA
MEDIUM SPEED COST
TWISTED WIRE 300 BPS - 10 MBPS LOW

MICROWAVE 256 KBPS - 100 MBPS

SATELLITE 256 KBPS - 100 MBPS

COAXIAL CABLE 56 KBPS - 200 MBPS

FIBER OPTICS 500 KBPS - 6.4 TBPS HIGH


BPS: BITS PER SECOND
KBPS: KILOBITS PS, MBPS: MEGABITS PS,
GBPS: GIGABITS PS, TBPS: TERABITS PS

8.19 © 2002 by Prentice Hall


COMMUNICATIONS PROCESSORS

• FRONT- END PROCESSOR: Minicomputer


manages communication for host computer
• CONCENTRATOR: Computer collects
messages for batch transmission to host
computer
• CONTROLLER: Computer controls interface
between CPU and peripheral devices
• MULTIPLEXER: Allows channel to carry
multiple sources
simultaneously
*

8.20 © 2002 by Prentice Hall


NETWORK TOPOLOGIES

USER

USER HOST USER

USER
STAR

8.21 © 2002 by Prentice Hall


NETWORK TOPOLOGIES

USER USER USER

USER USER USER

BUS
8.22 © 2002 by Prentice Hall
NETWORK TOPOLOGIES

USER

USER USER

USER
RING

8.23 © 2002 by Prentice Hall


LOCAL NETWORKS
• PRIVATE BRANCH EXCHANGE (PBX):
firm’s central switching system
• LOCAL AREA NETWORK (LAN): dedicated
channels; limited distance (less than 2000
foot radius); higher capacity than PBX.
Can share expensive hardware & software
*

8.24 © 2002 by Prentice Hall


LOCAL AREA NETWORK (LAN)
• GATEWAY: Connection to other networks
• ROUTER: Forwards data to other networks
• NETWORK OPERATING SYSTEM (NOS):
Manages file server; routes communications
on network
• PEER - TO - PEER: In some small networks all
computers have equal power
*

8.25 © 2002 by Prentice Hall


WIDE - AREA NETWORK (WAN)
Network spans large geographic
distances. Can include cable,
satellite, microwave
• SWITCHED LINES:
Route determined by
current traffic
• DEDICATED LINES: Constantly
available for high-volume traffic
*
8.26 © 2002 by Prentice Hall
VALUE-ADDED NETWORK
(VAN)
• PRIVATE, MULTIPATH, DATA ONLY
• 3rd PARTY MANAGED
• USED BY SEVERAL ORGANIZATIONS
• SUBSCRIPTION BASIS
*

8.27 © 2002 by Prentice Hall


NETWORK SERVICES
• PACKET SWITCHING
• FRAME RELAY
• ASYNCHRONOUS TRANSFER MODE (ATM)
• INTEGRATED SERVICES DIGITAL
NETWORK (ISDN)
• SYMMETRIC DIGITAL SUBSCRIBER LINE
• CABLE MODEM
• T1 LINE
*
8.28 © 2002 by Prentice Hall
PACKET SWITCHING (X.25)

• FORM OF Value Added Network


• BREAKS DATA BLOCKS INTO
SMALL PACKETS (e.g.: 128 Bytes)
• PACKETS ROUTED BY MOST
ECONOMICAL MEANS
• REASSEMBLED AT DESTINATION
*

8.29 © 2002 by Prentice Hall


FRAME RELAY

• PACKAGES DATA INTO BLOCKS


(FRAMES)
• HIGH-SPEED TRANSMISSION
• RELIABLE LINES
• NO ERROR-CORRECTION
ROUTINES
*

8.30 © 2002 by Prentice Hall


ASYNCHRONOUS TRANSFER
MODE (ATM)
• CELL: 53 Groups of 8 Bytes Each
• USES FIBER OPTICS CABLE
• INDEPENDENT OF VENDOR
HARDWARE SPEEDS
• CAN TIE LAN TO WAN
*

8.31 © 2002 by Prentice Hall


INTEGRATED SERVICES DIGITAL
NETWORK (ISDN)
INTERNATIONAL STANDARD FOR
TRANSMITTING VOICE, VIDEO,
DATA
OVER PUBLIC TELEPHONE LINES
*

8.32 © 2002 by Prentice Hall


OTHER SERVICES:

• DIGITAL SUBSCRIBER LINE (DSL):


enhancing capacity over copper
telephone lines
• CABLE MODEM: modem for cable TV
for high-speed access to Internet
• T1 LINE: dedicated telephone
connection, 24 channels @ 1.544
megabits per second
8.33 * © 2002 by Prentice Hall
OTHER SERVICES:

• BROADBAND: High-speed
transmission, multiple channels
• NETWORK CONVERGENCE: Enables
simultaneous transmission of voice,
data, video. Attractive for multimedia
applications: Video collaboration,
voice-data call centers, distance
learning, unified messaging
8.34
* © 2002 by Prentice Hall
E-COMMERCE &
E-BUSINESS TECHNOLOGIES
• ELECTRONIC MAIL (e-mail)
• GROUPWARE
• VOICE MAIL
• FACSIMILE MACHINES (fax)
• TELECONFERENCING
• DATACONFERENCING
• VIDEOCONFERENCING

*
8.35 © 2002 by Prentice Hall
E-COMMERCE &
E-BUSINESS TECHNOLOGIES
• DIGITAL INFORMATION SERVICES:
Commercial service provides desired mix
• DISTANCE LEARNING: Education, training
delivered over a distance, can include
printed material,
teleconferencing, interactive
multimedia, Web sites
*

8.36 © 2002 by Prentice Hall


COMMERCIAL DIGITAL INFORMATION
SERVICES
PROVIDER TYPE OF SERVICE

AMERICA ONLINE General interest / business information

PRODIGY General interest / business information

MICROSOFT NETWORK General interest / business information

DOW JONES NEWS RETRIEVAL Business / financial information

DIALOG Business / scientific / technical information

LEXIS Legal research

NEXIS News / business information

8.37 © 2002 by Prentice Hall


ELECTRONIC DATA INTERCHANGE
(EDI)
COMPUTER - TO - COMPUTER
EXCHANGE BETWEEN TWO
ORGANIZATIONS
OF STANDARD BUSINESS
TRANSACTION DOCUMENTS
SELLER CUSTOMER
*
ORDERS, PAYMENTS

COMPUTER SHIPPING NOTICES, PRICE COMPUTER

UPDATES, INVOICES

8.38 © 2002 by Prentice Hall


c h a p t e r

8
TELECOMMUNICATIONS
AND NETWORKS

8.39 © 2002 by Prentice Hall

You might also like