To Previous Chapter To Table of Contents To Bottom of Page To Next Chapter

CS457/557 - Computer Networks: Chapter 2 - Indtroductory Concepts

Objectives

  1. Distinguish between:
    • analog - digital
    • synchronous - asynchronous
    • full-duplex - half-duplex - simplex
    • two-wire - four-wire
    • serial - parallel
    • bps - baud rate
    • leased line - dial-up/switched line
  2. understand importance of standards and RS-232
  3. Understand three components of any data comm system (hardware, software, media)
  4. Apply I-P-O frame to technology analysis
  5. Understand concept of modularity of design
  6. Illustrate use of OSI model as a frame of reference
  7. Understand basic structure of public phone network
  8. understand impact and limitation of various modulation techniques

Introduction

Practice the vocabulary

Getting the bits and pieces of data from here to there

  1. Receive the bits and pieces of data
  2. Examine the bits and pieces of data
  3. Decide how to process the data
  4. Send the data to its proper destination

Encoding

Serial vs. Parallel

Most data communications is serial
Serial Parallel
Transmission one bit after another all bits simultaneously
Speed slower faster
Distances farther shorter
Application between two computers within the computer
to lower speed printers
to data comm equipment
Cable all bits travel down one wire each bit travels down its own wire

Parallel to Serial

requires a UART (Universal Asynchronous Receiver Transmitter)

Communcations Software

  1. takes data from PC's serial port -> modem cable -> modem -> phone line -> modem -> serial port
  2. can store phone numbers and auto dial
  3. can initiate, monitor, resume and terminate transfer of files

Serial Port

DB-25, DB-9 uses RS-232-C standards established by EIA(Electrical Industries Association)

Serial Cable or Modem Cable

MODEM

modulator-demodulator (converts input from digital to output of analog signal) data transmission is over a switched or dial-up line via the POTS analog transmission - uses bandwidth from 300 Hz to 3300 Hz)

Modulation/Demodulation

Carrier Wave - typical sine wave can be modulated by: method of data movement

More than one bit per baud

Characteristics/Questions Node 1 Compatibility Issues
with Other Notes
Hardware Modem:
Manufacturer:
Baud rate:
bps:
Interface:
Error detection standard:
Error correction standard:
Data compresion standard:
PC:
Operating System
Operating System version:
Software: Communications Software:
File transfer protocol:
error dectection standard:
error correction standard:
Media Phone Network:
Switched or leased line:
Analog or digital:
2-wire or 4-wire:
Async or sync:
half or full duplex
Modem cable from PC to modem:

Importance of Standards

V. standards (CCITT) MNP (Microcom Networking Protocol) (defacto standard)

OSI Model Concepts

phone network (OSI layer 1 - physical layer) requires RJ-11 interface
Service Name Dial-up/
Leased
Analog/
Digital
Async/Sync 2-wire/4-wire Flat/Usage Trans. Rate
Analog
POTS D A Depends 2 U V.90 (56 Kbps download / 33.6 upload)
Voice Grade Lease L A S 4 F V.90 (56 Kbps download / 33.6 upload)
Narrowband Digital
DDS L D S 4 F 56K
DS-0 L D S 4 F 64K
Wideband/Broadband Digital
T-1 L D S 4 F 1.544 Mbps
T-3 L D S Fiber F 44.836
Digital Dial-up
ISDN D D S 4 U 144Kbps
Switched ISDN D D S 4 U 56kBPS

Two-wire versus Four-wire

simplex vs. half-duplex vs. full duplex
two-wire typically only supports half-duplex which requires "handshaking"

Narrowband Digital Services

DDS (Digtal Data Service) requires a CSU/DSU (customer service unit / data service unit) instead of a modem and requires that the speed be specified beforehand

Broadband Digital Services

T-1, T-3, ISDN


Slides


Review Questions: [e-mail your answers (where possible) to summers_wayne@ColumbusState.edu before 4 p.m. on Thurs., Sept. 10, 1998]

#16 & 37

Activities:

#1

To Previous Chapter To Table of Contents To top of page To Next Chapter