Data Comm
Data Comm
a. Digital-to-digital
a. PSK
b. Digital-to-analog
b. ASK
c. Analog-to analog
c. FSK
d. Analog-to-digital
d. QAM
a. Digital-to-digital
b. Digital-to-analog
c. Analog-to-analog
a. 200 samples/sec
d. Analog-to-digital
b. 500 samples/sec
c. 1000 samples/sec
d. 1200 samples/sec
a. Digital-to-digital
b. Digital-to-analog
c. Analog-to analog
a. 100
d. Analog-to-digital
b. 400
c. 800
d. 1600
a. Digital-to-digital
b. Digital-to-analog
c. Analog-to analog
a. 8.02 kbps
d. Analog-to-digital
b. 4.17 kbps
c. 13.74 kbps
d. 26.58 kbps
a. Amplitude
b. Frequency
c. Bit rate
a. 300
d. Baud rate
b. 400
c. 600
d. 1200
a. NRZ-I
b. RZ
c. Manchester
d. AMI
a. 4
b. 5
c. 6
d. 7
a. AMI
b. B8ZS
c. RZ
d. Manchester
a. 1
b. 3
c. 4
d. 5
a. 16 bits/cycle
b. 4 bits/cycle
c. 8 bits/cycle
d. 2 bits/cycle
a. Asynchronous serial
b. Synchronous serial
c. Parallel
d. A and B
a. 2
b. 3
c. 4
a. 1
b. 0
c. Undefined
19. The majority of the pins f the EIA-RS232 interface are used for _____ purpose.
a. Control
b. Timing
c. Data
d. Testing
a. DB-15
b. DB-25
c. DB37
d. DB-9
a. A null modem
b. An EIA-RS-232 modem
c. A DB-45 connector
d. A transceiver
a. To narrow bandwidth
b. To simplify encoding
a. Equal to
b. Less than
c. More than
d. Double that of
a. V.33
b. V.34
c. V.39
d. V.37
a. Digital
b. Analog
c. PSK
d. QAM
a. 5
b. 9.54 dB
c. 4.77 dB
d. 3.4
a. 5.0 V
b. 0.5 V
c. 0.005 V
d. 0.05 V
a. 2 bits/cycle
b. 4 bits/cycle
c. 8 bits/cycle
d. 16 bits/cycle
a. Digital, analog
b. Analog, digital
c. PSK, FSK
d. FSK, PSK
a. 16-QAM
b. FSK
c. 8-PSK
a. 24 Mbps, 48 dB
b. 48 Mbps, 24 dB
c. 24 Mbps, 24 dB
d. 48 Mbps, 48 dB
a. Bell 103
b. Bell 201
c. Bell 212
a. EIA-RS-449
b. EIA-RS-232
c. EIA-RS-423
d. RS-422
a. 50
b. 400
c. 500
d. 4000
a. 107.5 kHz
b. 3.57 MHz
c. 357.14 kHz
d. 1.075 MHz
a. 0.1
b. 10
c. 100
d. 500
a. 25 bits
b. 30 bits
c. 19 bits
c. 20 MHz
d. 41 bits
d. 50 MHz
42. The EIA standard specified in the EIA232 standard is ______ volts.
d. Data-circuit terminating
equipment
d. Between 3 and 15
a. 10 MHz
a. 9600 wpm
b. 5 MHz
b. 57600 wpm
c. 20 MHz
c. 160 wpm
d. 40 MHz
d. 11520 wpm
a. 768 kbps
b. 12 kbps
a. 12.8 kbps
c. 12.8 kbps
b. 6.4 kbps
d. 46.08 kbps
c. 36.144 kbps
d. 18.072 kbps
a. 40 MHz
b. 10 MHz
a. NRZ-I
b. NRZ-L
c. Manchester
d. Differential Manchester
a. 5 kHz
b. 10 kHz
c. 20 kHz
d. 2.5 kHz
a. 8.8 dB
b. 16.16 dB
c. 21.81 dB
d. 18.8 dB
a. 20
b. 36
c. 25
d. 19
a. Mechanical
b. Electrical
c. Function
a. 30 kHz
b. 15 kHz
c. 60 kHz
d. 45 kHz.
a. Bandwidth
b. Loss
c. Entropy
d. Quantum
56. Ergonomics
c. Both a and b
d. System cost
a. Resistors
b. Capacitors
c. Bullets
d. Inductance
c. Gray code
d. Complementary codes
a. Modulator
b. Transmission line
c. Terminal
d. Equalizer
a. Binary
b. NRZ
c. Bipolar
d. Manchester
a. A compromise equalizer
b. A statistical equalizer
c. An adaptive equalizer
d. An impairment equalizer
a. Control section
b. Receiver section
c. Transmitter section
d. Terminal section
a. Hexadecimal
b. Huffman codes
a. Set of symbols
b. Start of header
d. BCC
a. 9
b. 7
c. 5
d. 8
a. Voiceband modem
a. 1
c. Computer bus
b. 2
d. Digital PBX
c. 4
d. 8
a. EBCDIC
b. ASCII
c. SBT
d. Fieldata
a. Voiceband modem
c. Computer bus
d. Digital PBX
a. Parallel transmission
b. Unlimited expansion
d. Application independent
interfaces
a. Radio
b. Optical fibers
c. Coaxial cable
d. Twisted pair
a. Access control
b. Addressing
c. Automatic retransmission of a
message
a. Continuous energy
c. No dc component
d. No signal change at a 1 to 0
transition
a. Digital PBX
c. Token-passing network
b. Applications processing
c. Flow control
a. Digital PBX
d. Routing
c. Token-passing network
a. Clock synchronization
b. Error checking
c. Collision avoidance
d. Broadcast
b. Closed-circuit TV
c. Voice circuits
b. Unlimited distances
d. In-service expansion
b. Unlimited distances
d. In-service expansion
d. Transmission up to several
thousand feet
10
d. DTE/DCE interface
a. Three
b. Four
c. Seven
c. A complete description of a
public data network
d. None
a. A network layer
b. An administrative layer
a. Between peers
c. User data
b. Between nonpeers
d. A packet switch
c. Across an interface
a. 8
11
b. 2
c. 4
d. 3
a. Carrier
b. Sideband
c. Information
d. Broadband
a. Return to zero
b. Bipolar
c. Unipolar
a. I carriers
b. E carriers
c. A carriers
d. T carriers
a. Telemetry
b. Stereo broadcasting
c. Telephone
d. Secure communications
a. Gateways
b. Routers
c. Bridges
d. Hubs
a. Twin Lead
d. All of these
c. Twisted Pair
d. Coax
12
a. Digital modulation
b. Digital transmission
c. Data communications
d. Pulse modulation
a. Pulse-position modulation
b. Pulse-code modulation
c. Pulsewidth modulation
d. Pulse-frequency modulation
a. Character-oriented protocols
b. Byte-oriented protocols
c. Bit-oriented protocols
a. Jam proof
b. Security
c. Immunity of fading
d. Noise proof
a. Quantizing
b. Companding
c. Pre emphasis
d. Mixing
a. Sampling
b. Coding
c. Quantization
d. Aliasing
a. Slot Time
b. Transmission time
c. Frame time
d. Bit rate
a. Baseband
b. Composite baseband
13
c. Information
d. Composite carrier
a. equipment failures
b. typing mistakes
c. noise
a. QAM
b. ASK
c. PSK
d. FSK
a. Mark, space
b. Space, mark
c. Space, space
d. Mark, mark
a. Digital communications
c. Data communications
a. Ethernet
b. Token passing
c. Token ring
d. Token bus
a. Ring
b. WAN
c. UART
d. PBX
a. unnatural sampling
c. natural sampling
d. free sampling
a. Analog-to-Digital converter
b. Digital-to-analog converter
14
c. Pre-emphasis circuit
a. Coding efficiency
d. Compander
b. Companding
c. Pre-emphasis
d. Dynamic Range
a. Application layer
b. Network layer
c. Session layer
d. Physical layer
c. Differential PCM
d. Delta modulation
a. Digital transmission
b. Digital sampling
c. Digital radio
d. Data transmission
a. 192 kbps
b. 148 kbps
c. 64 kbps
d. 1.544 Mbps
a. ASK
b. PSK
c. FSK
d. QAM
a. XOR
b. Multiplexer
c. Shift register
15
d. Mixer
a. Op - Amp
b. Bandpass filter
c. Discriminator
d. Subcarrier oscillator
a. channel access
b. collision detection
c. collision avoidance
d. carrier sense
a. ring
b. bus
c. star
d. square
a. probability of errors
b. error detection
c. error control
a. line speed
b. baud rate
c. output rate
d. bit rate
a. Multiplexer
b. Demultiplexer
c. A/D converter
d. D/A converter
a. baud rate
b. phase shift
c. bit rate
d. frequency deviation
a. Quantum
b. Step size
c. Resolution
d. Any of these
b. Network Protocol
16
b. it is redundant
a. PDM
b. PCM
c. PLM
d. PAM
a. 1.075 MHz
b. 10 MHz
c. 5 MHz
d. 10.5 MHz
a. overload distortion
b. granular noise
c. slope overload
d. peak limiting
c. a group
d. a supergroup
a. PLL discriminator
b. Pulse-averaging discriminator
c. Foster-Seeley discriminator
d. Radio detector
a. See through
b. Transparent
c. Vague
d. Opaque
a. FSK
b. BPSK
c. DPSK
d. QAM
17
a. Antipodal signaling
b. Carrier recovery
c. Squaring loop
d. Phase referencing
a. Subcarrier
b. Bandpass filters
c. A/D converters
d. FET switches
a. Bandwidth efficiency
b. Spectral efficiency
c. Information density
d. All of these
a. Broadband
b. Baseband
c. CSMA/CD
d. Token ring
d. Consists of 5 supergroups
a. a telephone
b. teletype
c. telegraph
d. CW
a. Packet
18
b. Frame
a. Line turnaround
c. Datagram
b. Selection
d. Data
c. Line control
d. Control Protocol
a. baseband
b. broadband
c. ring
a. Pre-emphasis
d. bus
b. Filtering
c. De-emphasis
d. Companding
a. serial is faster
d. fed in at a GTE
a. PBX system
b. Hospital system
a. Slot time
d. Cable TV system
b. Frame time
c. Transmission time
d. Any of these
a. ASK
c. GSK
d. Any of these
b. thermal noise
19
a. Flow control
b. Sequence control
c. Line control
d. Framing
a. Aperture error
b. Quantization error
c. Aperture distortion
d. Slope overload
a. analog companding
b. A law companding
c. Digital companding
d. U law companding
d. on and off
a. Biphase - M
b. B8Z
c. Manchester
d. UPNRZ
a. Transmission one
b. Telecommunication one
c. Telex one
a. Data
b. Flow
c. Control
d. Bearer
20
a. Unipolar
b. Polar
c. Bipolar
d. Multiplexing
d. Any of these
a. Quantizing
b. Sampling
c. Coding
d. Decoding
a. Frame time
b. Baud
c. Transmission time
d. Epoch
a. Shift register
b. XOR
c. 2 to 4 level converter
d. UART
a. economical
b. reliability
a. Codec
c. noise immunity
b. Data converter
d. efficiency
c. Multiplexer
d. Modem
a. Bandpass filter
a. voice
c. Anti aliasing
b. video
21
c. computer data
c. twisted pair
d. coax
b. frequency of operation
c. speed limit
d. baud rate
a. PLLs
b. Balanced modulators
c. Shift registers
d. Linear summers
a. Bearer
b. Data
c. Control
d. Flow
a. Aperture error
b. Overload distortion
c. Aliasing
a. asynchronous
d. Aperture distortion
b. serial
c. synchronous
d. parallel
a. baud
b. bits
c. dot length
a. unnatural sampling
c. natural sampling
d. free sampling
a. twin lead
200. A modem converts
22
b. overload distortion
c. alias
d. quantizing noise
d. None of these
a. Vocoder
b. Modem
c. Codec
d. Muldem
a. A600
b. U600
c. L600
d. L400
a. Supergroup
b. Group
c. Mastergroup
d. Jumbogroup
a. peak limiting
a. Frequency synthesis
b. Synchronism
d. Carrier recovery
a. Supergroup
b. Group
c. Mastergroup
d. Jumbogroup
a. Digital transmittal
b. Digital communications
c. Digital radio
d. Data communications
a. Normal call
b. Completed call
c. Logical call
d. Virtual call
23
a. ISDN
b. Broadband communications
c. ATM
d. Ethernet
d. all of these
a. Morse code
b. ASCII
c. Baudot
d. EBCDIC
a. 2 x 10^-5
b. 5 x 10^-5
c. 5 x 10^-6
d. 2 x 10^-6
b. GFSK
c. CPFSK
d. GSK
a. ASK
b. FSK
c. QAM
d. PSK
a. 40,000 bps
b. 80,000 bps
c. 20,000 bps
d. 16,000 bps
a. probability of error
b. error detection
c. error control
a. probability of error
b. error detection
c. error control
a. QFSK
24
d. Carrier-to-noise ratio
a. Morse
b. Baudot
c. CCITT-2
d. ARQ
a. 2
b. log 16 base 10
c. 8
d. 4
a. QAM
b. SSB
c. FSK
d. PSK
a. Parity
b. BCC
c. CRC
d. redundancy
a. time-division multiplex
b. frequency-division multiplex
c. pulse-code modulation
d. pulse-width modulation
25
a. Pulse modulation
b. Amplitude modulation
a. digital communications
c. Frequency modulation
b. quantizing
d. Digital modulation
c. PAM
d. PCM
a. N. S. Kapany
b. A. H. Reeves
a. quantizing
c. E. H. Alpine
b. companding
d. A. C. S. Van Heel
c. pre-emphasis
d. sampling
a. correlator
b. frequency synthesizer
d. Sweep generator
a. bandwidth
b. equipments
c. time
d. personnel
a. Analog methods
b. Digital methods
c. All of these
d. None of these
a. Codec
b. Modem
c. Muldem
d. Digital-to-analog converter
a. SYN
b. STX
c. SOH
d. ETB
26
c. Pre-emphasis
d. Dynamic range
a. codec
d. Any of these
b. muldem
c. vocoders
d. modem
a. 18 Mbps
b. 72 Mbps
c. 288 Mbps
d. 2.176 Gbps
a. 14 kHz
b. 56 kHz
c. 28 kHz
d. 112 kHz
a. Coding
b. Quantizing
c. Sampling
d. Any of these
c. Differential modulation
d. Delta modulation
a. Parity
b. Xmodem
c. CRC
d. LRC
a. Coding efficiency
b. Companding
b. PCM
c. Differential modulation
d. Delta modulation
27
a. XNOR
b. Bit Splitter
c. Balanced modulator
a. Unipolar
b. Bipolar
c. Polar
d. Non-return to zero
a. PSK
b. FSK
c. QAM
d. ASK
B. Bipolar
C. Unipolar
D. Return to zero
a. FDM frame
c. TDM frame
A. Digital biphase
B. diphase
C. Manchester code
D. Any of these
A. Intelligent TDMs
B. Asynchronous TDM
C. Stat mux
D. Any of these
a. Muldem
b. Vocoder
A. Monolithic
c. Modem
B. Combo chip
d. Codec
C. Film IC
28
D. Hybrid chip
A. Character channel
B. Broadband channel
C. Message channel
D. Information capacity
A. Supergroup
B. Group
C. Mastergroup
D. Jumbogroup
A. Broadband
B. Baseband
C. Carrier
D. Any of these
A. AND gates
B. bandpass filters
C. differentiation
D. integration
A. AND gates
B. bandpass filters
C. differentiation
D. integration
A. A600
B. U600
C. L600
A. reactance modulator
D. L400
B. varactor
C. VCO
D. PLL
29
A. twin lead
B. twisted pair
C. fiber-optic cable
D. coax
A. bus
B. ring
C. star
D. tree
A. 300
B. 900
C. 3600
D. 10800
D. companding
A. Flow control
B. Line discipline
C. Polling
D. Selection
A. Message oriented
B. Bit-oriented protocol
B. sync pulse
C. sampling
D. Asynchronous protocol
D. sequencer
A. Bridges
A. pre-emphasis
B. Gateways
B. de-emphasis
C. Switches
C. coding
D. Routers
30
B. Dynamic range
C. Resolution
D. Coding level
A. Message channel
B. Radio channel
C. Baseband channel
D. Wide channel
A. SONET
B. Frame relay
C. ATM
D. X.25
C. using u-law
D. forming supermastergroups
A. Overload distortion
B. Quantization error
C. Quantization noise
D. Granular noise
A. Generated by an oscillator
D. all of these
31
D. serves as a subcarrier
A. handshake
B. error-detection
C. data specifications
D. protocol
B. parity bit
C. CRC
D. error correction
A. FSK
B. BPSK
C. QPSK
D. QAM
A. 10 Mbps
B. 1.544 Mbps
C. 2.048 Mbps
D. 11 Mbps
A. log-PCM companding
B. A-law companding
C. u-law companding
D. any of these
32
A. Trellis code
B. Bandwidth efficiency
C. Squaring loop
D. Carrier recovery
A. AM
B. FM
C. SSB
D. PSK
A. greater than
C. less than
B. modulate subcarriers
D. equal
A. AM
B. FM
C. SSB
A. information capacity
D. PSK
B. data communications
C. information theory
D. information technology
A. constellation diagram
B. Venn diagram
C. phasor diagram
D. schematic diagram
A. Telemetry
B. Telecommand
C. Telecommunications
D. Remote control
33
B. Eye patterns
C. Reflection coefficient
D. Any of these
A. PSN code
B. Frequency of operation
C. Clock rate
D. Modulation type
A. 4 bits
B. 5 bits
C. 7 bits
D. 8 bits
A. X modem protocol
B. Y modem protocol
C. Z modem protocol
D. BLAST
A. 21,000 bps
B. 42,000 bps
C. 14,000 bps
D. 12,000 bps
A. Bandwidth efficiency
B. Spectral efficiency
C. Information density
D. All of these
A. Phase referencing
B. Trellis code
C. Squaring loop
D. any of these
A. information theory
B. information capacity
C. information technology
D. digital communications
A. continuous ADC
B. tracking ADC
D. slope ADC
34
A. Baudot
B. ASCII
C. CCITT-2
D. EBCDIC
C. Noise factor
D. Carrier-to-noise ratio
A. Packet switching
B. Message switching
C. Circuit switching
D. Digital switching
A. Duty cycle
B. Companding
C. Coding efficiency
D. Dynamic range
A. 8 bits/cycle
B. 2 bits/cycle
C. 3 bits/cycle
D. 4 bits/cycle
A. Bandpass filter
B. Sample-and-hold circuit
C. Analog-to-digital converter
D. Digital-to-analog converter
A. Signal-to-noise ratio
B. Noise figure
A. FDM
B. ATM
C. TDM
D. Spread spectrum
A. Selection
B. Polling
C. Error control
D. Master control
35
A. Error control
B. Selection
C. Protocol
D. Synchronization
C. redundancy is essential
D. any of these
A. Flow control
B. Error control
C. Line discipline
D. Selection
B. QPSK only
C. AM plus QPSK
D. AM plus FSK
A. information theory
B. information capacity
A. frequency-shift keying
C. information technology
B. two-tone modulation
D. digital communications
C. pulse-code modulation
D. single-tone modulation
A. refers to distortion
D. refers to noise
A. bit
B. baud
A. codec
B. muldem
C. vocoders
D. modem
36
A. Modulation
B. Multiplexing
C. Encoding
D. Decoding
A. Packet switching
B. Message switching
C. Circuit switching
D. Digital switching
B. quaternary amplitude
modulation
A. BPSK
B. QPSK
C. DPSK
D. QAM
A. PCM
B. PWM
C. Differential PCM
D. Delta
A. baseband
B. broadband
C. ring
D. bus
B. frequency modulation
C. pulse-position modulation
D. pulse-code modulation
A. minimizes noise
37
A. baud
B. bits
C. bit rate
A. PAM
B. PLM
C. PPM
D. PCM
A. Digital phone
B. Picturephone
C. Cameraphone
B. simplicity
C. lower cost
A. set
B. sequence
C. block
A. balanced modulator
D. collection
B. shift register
C. binary adder
D. multiplexer
A. Noise
B. Fading
C. A jamming signal
D. An intermittent connection
A. information
B. data
C. symbol
D. intelligence
A. 1111111 1
B. 1100110 1
C. 0011010 1
38
D. 0000000 0
A. Modem
B. Codec
C. Muldem
D. DSU/CSU
D. PPM
B. Foster-Seeley discriminator
C. varactor
A. PSK
A. PAM
B. FSK
B. PCM
C. QUAM
C. PLM
D. OOK
39