Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Communication Technology. Learning Standard 3. Communication Technologies Ideas can be communicated through engineering drawings, written reports, and.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Communication Technology. Learning Standard 3. Communication Technologies Ideas can be communicated through engineering drawings, written reports, and."— Presentation transcript:

1 Communication Technology

2 Learning Standard 3. Communication Technologies Ideas can be communicated through engineering drawings, written reports, and pictures. 3.1 Identify and explain the components of a communication system, i.e., source, encoder, transmitter, receiver, decoder, storage, retrieval, and destination. 3.2 Identify and explain the appropriate tools, machines, and electronic devices (e.g. drawing tools, computer aided design, and cameras) used to produce and/or reproduce design solutions (e.g., engineering drawings, prototypes, and reports) 3.3 Identify and compare communication technologies and systems, i.e., audio, visual, printed and mass communication. 3.4 Identify and explain how symbols and icons (e.g., international symbols and graphics) are used to communicate a message.

3 Learning Objectives At the conclusion of the unit students will be able to: Define & understand the difference between communication & communication technology Understand the 5 things that must be considered when creating a message in order for the message to be effective Identify & understand the different types of communication

4 Learning Objectives Identify & explain the components of a communication system Understand what an icon/symbol is & why they are important to communication technology

5 Learning Objectives Understand why the following people are important to the advancement of communication technology: Johannes Gutenberg Alexander Graham Bell Philo Farnsworth Martin Cooper Tim Berners-Lee Jack Dorsey Grace Hopper Steve Jobs Bill Gates

6 Communication Communication Technology This information is used to help people make decisions solve problems Exchange of information between people Allows humans to exchange (or share) ideas easier

7 Message Design Purpose of the Message: WHY have you created the message In order to create an effective message, the person creating it needs to be aware of 5 things: Information (ideas) being exchanged must be understood in order for communication to be effective…

8 Message Design Intended Audience: WHO will be receiving the message Nature of the Message: WHAT is the message about

9 Message Design Medium Being Used: HOW will the message be delivered (TV, Radio, Billboard, Internet, Text Message, Email, Music, etc…)

10 Message Design Language used create message: Message should be created using language that is understandable to the intended audience to allow clear communication

11 Types of Communication Technology

12 Mass Communication Communication to a large number of people at one time

13 Began with the invention of the Printing Press Mass Communication Invented by Johannes Gutenberg in 1448

14 Mass Communication Prior to this invention, people had to write every word on every page of every book by hand – this was a very slow process As a result books were very expensive so only wealthy people had access to the knowledge they contained

15 Mass Communication The Printing Press made it possible for the common man, woman & child to have access to books for the first time, which meant they would also have the ability to accumulate knowledge

16 Telecommunication Communication over a distance Examples:Phones, televisions, radios, satellites

17 Graphic Communication Communication that sends & receives messages visually using pictures & symbols Examples:Magazines, newspapers, TV, messages on clothing, billboards, road signs, computer images

18 Wave Communication Sound Waves: Example: Vibrations traveling through the air that can be perceived by the human ear Musical instruments & human voice

19 Wave Communication Light Waves: Message is transmitted as waves of light Example:Television

20 Electromagnetic Carrier Waves: Wave Communication Message is converted into electrical signals and carried through the atmosphere. Large antennas & dishes transmit & receive the signals. Example: Television Radio Cell Phone calls

21 This creates a more complete & entertaining message Multimedia Communication Combining text, sound & images into one presentation Example: Books, Computers, Video games, Television, Power Point Slideshows

22 Components of a Communication System Source Where the information begins Where the signal is sent from

23 Components of a Communication System Encoder Changes the information (message) into code so it can be sent (transmitted) Source

24 Components of a Communication System Encoder Transmitter Sends the encoded message over a channel Channel: The medium or link through which a signal is sent from the transmitter to the receiver Examples: wire cables, fiber-optic cables, wireless wave communication

25 Components of a Communication System Receiver Takes in the encoded message sent through the channel by the transmitter

26 Components of a Communication System Decoder Translates the encoded message into useful information so that it can be understood Receiver

27 Components of a Communication System Source Encoder Transmitter Decoder Receiver Where the information begins Where the signal is sent Changes the information (message) into code so it can be sent (transmitted) Sends the encoded message over a channel Translates the encoded message into useful information so that it can be understood Takes in the encoded message sent through the channel by the transmitter Channel:The medium or link through which a signal is sent from the transmitter to the receiver Examples: wire cables, fiber- optic cables, wireless wave communication

28 Some communication systems have 2 additional components: Storage:Message is saved for later use Retrieval:Message is recalled when needed Examples: Voicemail / Telephone answering machines / Cameras / Components of a Communication System iPods / Books / Notebooks / CDs / DVDs / Blu-rays / DVRs / Video Games / Computer hard drives / Flash drives

29 Icon/Symbol: Icons & Symbols A picture or image that is used to represent something else Allows people to communicate without using words

30 Icons & Symbols

31 Alexander Graham Bell Born March 3, 1847 in Edinburgh, Scotland Worked as a teacher for deaf students in Boston & became a professor at Boston University

32 Alexander Graham Bell Obtained the first patent for the telephone on March 7, 1876

33 Alexander Graham Bell Made first phone call to his assistant Thomas Watson who was working in another room on March 10, 1876

34 Alexander Graham Bell Created the Bell Telephone Company on July 9, 1877 with Watson and several other business partners

35 Alexander Graham Bell The first long distance call between New York City & Chicago was made in October 1892 The first long distance call across the United States was made between New York City & San Francisco on January 25, 1915

36 Alexander Graham Bell Interestingly, Bell considered the telephone an intrusion and would not have one in his Study

37 Philo Farnsworth Born in Utah in 1906 First person to create a fully functional all- electronic television system & demonstrate it to the public in 1927 Holds over 165 patents

38 Martin Cooper Born in Chicago in 1928 Worked as a General Manager for Motorola’s Communication Systems Division

39 Martin Cooper Made the first Cell Phone call on April 3, 1973 in New York City The call was made to his friend & competitive rival Joel Engel who was working for Bell Labs who was also working to develop a cellular phone

40 Martin Cooper It took 10 years for the cell phone to be ready to sell to the public (1983) This first publicly available cell phone weighed 16 ounces (1 pound) & sold for $3500

41 Martin Cooper Today Cooper is the CEO of ArrayCom, a company that he co-founded in 1992 ArrayCom develops more reliable and inexpensive cellular antennas

42 Tim Berners-Lee Born in England in 1955 Worked as a computer scientist for CERN in Switzerland in 1989 CERN employed thousands of Nuclear Research Scientists & engineers worldwide

43 Tim Berners-Lee Tim Berners-Lee was working to come up with a way for workers at CERN to share documents

44 Tim Berners-Lee Tim Berners-Lee wrote the first “browser” software using hypertext Text & documents could be linked together - not just within CERN but over the entire internet Hypertext:One piece of computer text can be linked with another

45 Tim Berners-Lee He called his program “World Wide Web” which worked like current browsers except there were no pictures or color monitors

46 Tim Berners-Lee The first website went online on August 6, 1991. CERN announced that it could be used by the public for free in 1993

47 Tim Berners-Lee The World Wide Web has become arguably most powerful communication medium the world has known Today Berners-Lee works at MIT in Cambridge, Massachusetts & is the leader of an organization (W3C) that is responsible for overseeing the Web’s continued development


Download ppt "Communication Technology. Learning Standard 3. Communication Technologies Ideas can be communicated through engineering drawings, written reports, and."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google