Data and Computer Communications
Data and Computer Communications
Communications
Chapter 1 – Data Communications,
Data Networks, and the Internet
Ninth Edition
by William Stallings
Traffic • Development of
growth at new services
a high &
steady • Advances in
rate technology
Changes in Networking
Technology
* Digital electronics
Convergence
The merger of previously distinct telephony
and information technologies and markets
Layers:
• applications
• these are seen by the end users
• enterprise services
• services the information network supplies to support
applications
• infrastructure
• communication links available to the enterprise
Convergence Layers
Benefits
Convergence benefits include:
Interfacing Routing
Flow control
Data Communications Model
Transmission Lines
Capacity
The basic building block of
any communications facility
is the transmission line.
Reliability
and
Networking
Advances in technology have led to greatly
increased capacity and the concept of
integration, allowing equipment and
networks to work simultaneously.
Voice Data
Image Video
LANs and WANs
There are two broad categories
of networks:
Typically
consist of a number of
interconnected switching nodes
Wide Area Networks
Alternative technologies used include:
Circuit switching
Packet switching
Frame relay
Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM)
Circuit Switching
Uses a dedicated communications path
Connected sequence of physical links
between nodes
Logical channel dedicated on each link
Rapid transmission
The most common example of circuit
switching is the telephone network
Packet Switching
Data are sent out in a sequence of small
chunks called packets
Packets are passed from node to node
along a path leading from source to
destination
Packet-switching networks are commonly
used for terminal-to-terminal computer and
computer-to-computer communications
Frame Relay
Transmission mediums
• fiber optic
• wireless
Network categories:
• WAN
• LAN
Internet
• evolved from the ARPANET
• TCP/IP foundation