Lecture 5
Lecture 5
Lecture Five
Week Five
Shareef M. Shareef-PhD
[email protected]
2021-2022
1
Outline
Digital Bandwidth
4
Bandwidth Highway Analogy
5
Bandwidth Measurements
6
Internet connection bandwidths
WAN service Bandwidth
Modem / Dialup 56 kbit/s
T3 44.736 Mbit/s
E1 2.048 Mbit/s
E3 34.368 Mbit/s
7
Various DSL Techniques
ADSL (Asymmetric Digital Subscriber Line): is a data communication technology used to
transmit digital information at a high bandwidth, such as telephone lines. It provides
continuously-available connection. It uses most of the channel to transmit downstream to
the user and only a small part to receive information from the user.
DSL Filter, or a splitter, allows a single telephone connection to be used for both ADSL
service and voice calls at the same time.
The main difference between ADSL & SDSL is, the ADSL has "Asymmetric" or
unequal line speeds, in other words the download and upload are not the same.
However, in the SDSL the download and upload is equal. SDSL supports data rate up
to 3 Mbps.
Types of Transmission
10
Digital Transfer Calculation
OSI Model
Network Communication
When computers send information through a network, all
communications begin at a source then travel to a
destination
The OSI and TCP/IP models have layers that explain how data
is communicated from one computer to another
OSI vs ISO
OSI (open systems interconnection) is a set of standards to enhance
compatibility between networks, and It was first introduced in
the late 1970s.
• The OSI reference model is a good way to describe, think about and
understand networking
• Define which parts of the network their products should work with.
Benefits of Layered Model
It breaks network communication into smaller simpler parts.
It standardizes network components to allow multiple vendor
development.
It allows different types of network hardware and software to
communicate with each other
It breaks network communication into smaller parts to make learning
it easier.
It prevents changes in one layer from affecting the other layers, so
that they can develop more quickly.
OSI model makes data more manageable.
Layers
17
Layers (cont.)
Let us first consider the sender site.
• Higher layer: The sender writes the letter, inserts the letter in an envelope, writes
the sender and receiver addresses, and drops it in a mailbox.
• Middle layer: The letter is picked up by a letter carrier (post man) and delivered
to the post office.
• Lower layer: The letter is sorted at the post office; a carrier transports the letter.
The letter is then on its way to the receiver. On the way to the receiver’s local
post office, the letter may actually go through a central office. In addition, it
may be transported by truck, train, airplane, boat, or a combination of these.