Lecture 1
Lecture 1
Lecture 1
Introduction
1.1
1-1 DATA COMMUNICATIONS
Telecommunication means communication at a distance.
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.
characteristics of data communication
1.3
1-2 Communications Model Components
Source: generates data to be transmitted (telephone, PC)
Transmitter: Converts data into transmittable signals
(modems)
Transmission System:
Can be single line or complex network system
Receiver: Converts received signal into data (modems)
Destination: Takes incoming data (telephone, PC)
Simplex
• Simplex
– Unidirectional
– As on a one-way
street
Half-Duplex
• Half-duplex
-Both transmit and receive
possible, but not at the
same time
-Like a one-lane road with
two-directional traffic
-as: Walkie-talkie, CB radio
Full-Duplex
• Full-duplex
– Transmit and receive simultaneously
– Like a two-way street, telephone network
– Channel capacity must be divided between two
directions
Point-to-Point Line Configuration
1.11
Network Criteria
Performance
Depends on Network Elements
Reliability
Failure rate of network components
Security
Data protection against corruption/loss of data due to:
Errors
Malicious users
1.12
Categories of Networks
Local Area Networks (LANs)
Short distances
Designed to provide local interconnectivity
Wide Area Networks (WANs)
Long distances
Provide connectivity over large areas
Metropolitan Area Networks (MANs)
Provide connectivity over areas such as a city, a campus
1.13
Local Area Network
1.15
Bus Topology
1.17
Ring Topology
Each device needs only one link and one I/O port
to connect it to any number of others.
This factor also makes it easy to install and
reconfigure.
1.19
A hybrid topology: a star backbone with three bus networks
1.20
Local Area Network
An isolated LAN connecting 12 computers to a hub in a closet
1.22
Metropolitan Area Network
It is suitable for
• Large geographical area
• Crossing public rights of way
• Rely in part on common carrier circuits
WANs: a switched WAN and a point-to-point WAN
1.24
A heterogeneous network made of four WANs and two LANs
1.25
WAN TECNOLOGY
Alternative technologies used for WAN:
Circuit switching
Packet switching
Frame relay
Packet Switching
• Data sent out of sequence
• Small chunks (packets) of data at a time
• Packets passed from node to node between
source and destination
• Packet switching designed for data rate 64
kb/s
Integrated Services Digital Network -ISDN
1.29