Chapter 6 Telecommunications and Networks
Chapter 6 Telecommunications and Networks
Chapter 6 Telecommunications and Networks
6
Telecommunications
and Networks
Learning Objectives
• Understand the concept of a network
• Identify major developments and trends in
the industries, technologies, and business
applications of telecommunications and
Internet technologies
• Provide examples of the business value of
Internet, intranet, and extranet applications
Learning Objectives
• Identify the basic components, functions,
and types of telecommunications networks
used in business
• Explain the functions of major components
of telecommunications network hardware,
software, media, and services
• Explain the concept of client/server
networking
Learning Objectives
• Understand the two forms of peer-to-peer
networking
• Explain the difference between digital and
analog signals
Network Concepts
• A network is an interconnected or
interrelated chain, group, or system
• The number of possible connections on a
network is N(N–1) or N2 –N
– N = number of nodes (points of connection)
– Example: 10 computers on a network =
10(10–1)
= 10x9 = 90 possible connections
Open Systems
• Open systems use common standards for
hardware, software, applications, and networks
– Internet networking technologies are a common
standard for open systems
• Connectivity
– Open systems provide greater connectivity
and network interoperability
– Middleware may be needed to help diverse
systems work together
Middleware
• Middleware
– A general term for any programming that mediates
between two separate programs
– Allows a particular database to access other databases
without custom programming
• Commonly known as the “plumbing” of an
information system
– It routes data and information between back-end data
sources and end user applications
– An essential component of any IT infrastructure
Digital Network Technologies
• Telecommunications are being revolutionized by
switch from analog to digital
– Analog: voice-oriented transmission
– Digital: discrete pulse transmission
• Benefits
– Higher transmission speeds
– Moves larger amounts of information
– Greater economy and much lower error rates
– Transmits multiple types of communications (data, voice,
video) on the same circuits
Wire & Wireless Technologies
• Fiber-optic
– Uses pulses of laser-generated light
– Reduced size and installation effort
– Vastly greater communication capacity
– Faster transmission speeds
– Freedom from electrical interference
• Satellite Transmission
– Can move massive quantities of data, audio,
and video over global networks
– Especially useful in isolated areas
Business Application Trends
• Telecommunications networks now play a
vital and pervasive role in Web-enabled…
– E-business processes
– Electronic commerce
– Enterprise collaboration
– Other applications that support operations,
management, and strategic objectives
Internet Service Providers
• ISP
– A company that specializes in providing easy
access to the Internet
– For a monthly fee, provides software, user name,
password, and Internet access
• ISPs themselves are connected to one
another through network access points
– One ISP can easily connect to another to obtain
addresses of websites or user nodes
Internet Applications
• Most popular Internet applications and uses
– E-mail
– Instant messaging
– Browsing the Web
– Newsgroups
– Chat rooms
– Publish opinions, subject matter, creative work
– Buy and sell
– Downloading (data, software, reports, pictures, music,
videos) & etc.
Intranets
• Intranets are protected by…
– Passwords
– Encryption
– Firewalls
• Customers, suppliers, and other business
partners can access an intranet via
extranet links
Extranets
• Network links that use Internet technologies to
connect the intranet of a business to the intranets
of another
• Virtual Private Networks
– Direct private network links, or private secure Internet
links between companies
• Unsecured Extranet
– Link between a company and others via the Internet,
relying on encryption of sensitive data and firewall
security systems
Telecommunications Network
Model
• A telecommunications network is any
arrangement where
– A sender transmits a message
– To a receiver
– Over a channel
– Consisting of some sort of medium
Telecommunications Network
Model
Telecommunications Network
Components
• Terminals
– Any input/output device that uses networks
to transmit or receive data
• Telecommunications processors
– Devices that support data transmission, reception
• Telecommunications channels
– Media over which data are transmitted, received
• Computers
– All sizes and types
Telecommunications Network
Components
•Star Network
– Ties end user computers to a central computer
•Ring Network
– Ties local computer processors together in a ring on a
relatively equal basis
•Bus Network
– Local processors share the same communications
channel
Network Topologies
• Mesh Network
– Uses direct communications lines to connect some or
all of the computers in the ring to
each other
• Switch
– A message-switching computer that handles
data communication between autonomous
local computers
Network Topologies
Network Architectures and
Protocols
• Protocol
– A standard set of rules and procedures for the
control of communications in a network
• Handshaking
– The process of exchanging predetermined
signals and characters
– Establishes a telecommunications session
between terminals and computers
Network Architectures and
Protocols
• Network Architecture
– Master plan of standard protocols, hardware,
software, and interfaces between end users
and computer systems
– Goal is to promote an open, simple, flexible,
and efficient telecommunications environment
OSI and TCP/IP Models
• Open Systems Interconnection (OSI) Model
– A seven-layer model that serves as a standard model
for network architectures
– Model for how messages should be transmitted
between two points in a network
– Each layer adds functions
• Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol
(TCP/IP)
– A five-layer telecommunications protocol used by the
Internet
Voice Over IP
• Internet Telephony
– Using an Internet connection to pass voice
data using IP instead of a telephone network
– Often referred to as voice over IP or VoIP
– Works like a regular phone, but skips long-distance
charges
– Runs over standard network infrastructure
– Requires a well-configured network to work smoothly
Bandwidth
• Bandwidth
– The frequency range of a telecommunications channel
that determines the maximum transmission rate
– Speed and capacity typically measured in bits
per second (bps)
– Sometimes call baud rate
• Transmission Rates
– Narrow-band = low speed
– Broadband = high speed
Transmission Speeds