Modems & Interface Standards
Modems & Interface Standards
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What we will cover
• Connections to the Computer
– Modems
– Other devices
• Types and characteristics
• Advantages and disadvantages
• Interface Standards
• Data Link Connections
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Connections in Networks
Connecting peripheral devices to a computer
is normally not a simple task.
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Connection via Modems
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Modems
Modem (Modulator/ Demodulator)
It takes digital electrical pulses from a
computer, terminal, or microcomputer and
converts them into a continuous analog
signal, for transmission over an analog
voice grade circuit.
It then re-converts the analog signal to its
original digital format.
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Modems (modulator-demodulator)
Modern modems use combinations of amplitude,
frequency, and phase modulation to achieve high data
rates.
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Modems
Connection negotiation is the ability of a modem to
automatically fall forward or fallback to faster or slower
speeds, respectively.
Modems
Modems can support numerous security features
including blacklisting, callback security, and backdoor
entry with password protection.
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Modems
Modems can be internal, in which they plug into a slot
inside a computer, or external, in which they are
separate from the computer and require a serial cable
and their own power supply.
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A/D
conversion
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Modem Pools
A relatively inexpensive technique that allows multiple
workstations to access a modem without placing a
separate modem on each workstations.
Modem pools can also be used to allow external users to
dial into a business or corporate network via a modem in
the modem pool.
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Interfacing
Connecting a device such as a modem (or DCE - data
circuit-terminating equipment or data communicating
equipment) to a computer (or DTE - data terminal
equipment).
The connections between the DTE and DCE are the
interchange circuits.
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Interface Standards
Many different groups contribute to interface standards:
International Telecommunications Union (ITU) (formerly
CCITT)
Electronics Industries Association (EIA)
Institute for Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE)
International Organization for Standards (ISO)
American National Standards Institute (ANSI)
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Interface Standards
All interface standards consist of four components:
1. The electrical component
2. The mechanical component
3. The functional component
4. The procedural component
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Interface Standards
The electrical component deals with voltages, line
capacitance, and other electrical characteristics.
The mechanical component deals with items such as the
connector or plug description. A standard connector is
the ISO 2110 connector, also known as DB-25.
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Interface Standards
The functional component describes the function of each
pin or circuit that is used in a particular interface.
The procedural component describes how the particular
circuits are used to perform an operation.
For example, the functional component may describe two
circuits, Request to Send and Clear to Send. The
procedural component describes how those two circuits
are used so that the DTE can transfer data to the DCE.
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X.21
Another interface standard that was designed to replace
the aging RS-232.
Currently popular in Europe and with ISDN connections.
Each circuit in the X.21 standard can contain many
different signals.
Since each circuit can transmit different signals, the
combination of signals on the four circuits is much larger
than if each circuit performed only a single function.
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Synchronous Connections
A second type of connection defined at the data link layer.
Transmits sequence of many characters
A synchronous connection creates a large package (frame)
that consists of header and trailer flags, control information,
optional address information, error detection code
(checksum), and the data.
A synchronous connection is more elaborate but transfers
data in a more efficient manner.
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Terminal-to-Mainframe Computer
Connections
A point-to-point connection is a direct, unshared connection
between a terminal and a mainframe computer.
A multipoint connection is a shared connection between
multiple terminals and a mainframe computer.
The mainframe is called the primary, and the terminals are
called the secondaries.
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Terminal-to-Mainframe Computer
Connections
To allow a terminal to transmit data to a mainframe, the
mainframe must poll (hey, are you ready?) the terminal.
Only one device is connected at a time
Two basic forms of polling include roll-call polling and hub
polling.
In roll-call polling, the mainframe polls each terminal in a
round-robin fashion.
In hub polling, the mainframe polls the first terminal, and
this terminal passes the poll onto the next terminal.
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