1 ch01 G
1 ch01 G
Introduction
1.1
1-1 DATA COMMUNICATIONS
The term telecommunication means communication at a
distance. The word data refers to information presented
in whatever form is agreed upon by the parties creating
and using the data. Data communications are the
exchange of data between two devices via some form of
transmission medium such as a wire cable.
1.2
Components
1.3
Data Representation
Text
In data communications, text is represented as a bit pattern, a sequence of bits (0s or
1s), Unicode, which uses 32 bits to represent a symbol or
character used in any language in the world. The American Standard Code for
Information
Interchange (ASCII),
Numbers
Numbers are also represented by bit patterns.
Images
Images are also represented by bit patterns. In its simplest form, an image is composed
of a matrix of pixels (picture elements), where each pixel is a small dot. The size of the
pixel depends on the resolution.
Audio
Audio refers to the recording or broadcasting of sound or music. Audio is by nature
different from text, numbers, or images.
Video
Video refers to the recording or broadcasting of a picture or movie.
1.4
Data Flow
1.5
Figure 1.2 Data flow (simplex, half-duplex, and full-duplex)
1-2 NETWORKS
1.6
Network Criteria
Performance
Performance can be measured in many ways,
including transit time and response time.
Transit time is the amount of time required for a
message to travel from one device to
another. Response time is the elapsed time between
an inquiry and a response. thời gian trôi qua
thăm dò
1.7
1.8
Figure 1.3 Types of connections: point-to-point and multipoint
1.9
Figure 1.4 Categories of topology
1.10
Figure 1.5 A fully connected mesh topology (five devices)
1.11
Figure 1.6 A star topology connecting four stations
1.12
Figure 1.7 A bus topology connecting three stations
1.13
Figure 1.8 A ring topology connecting six stations
1.14
Figure 1.9 A hybrid topology: a star backbone with three bus networks
1.15
Local Area Networks
◼ Smaller scope
◼ Building or small campus
◼ Usually owned by same organization as
attached devices
◼ Data rates much higher
◼ Usually broadcast systems
◼ Now some switched systems and ATM are
being introduced
Figure 1.10 An isolated LAN connecting 12 computers to a hub in a closet
1.17
Wide Area Networks
1.19
Metropolitan Area Networks
◼ MAN
◼ Middle ground between LAN and WAN
◼ Private or public network
◼ High speed
◼ Large area
Figure 1.12 A heterogeneous network made of four WANs and two LANs
1.21
1-3 THE INTERNET
1.22
Figure 1.13 Hierarchical organization of the Internet
1.24
1-4 PROTOCOLS AND STANDARDS
1.25
Protocol