Introduction to Information and Computer Science Networks Lecture d This material (Comp4_Unit7d) was developed by Oregon Health and Science University,

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Introduction to Information and Computer Science Networks Lecture d This material (Comp4_Unit7d) was developed by Oregon Health and Science University, funded by the Department of Health and Human Services, Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology under Award Number IU24OC

Networks Learning Objectives List and describe the various types of network communications and network addressing (Lecture a and b) List and define the different types of networks (Lecture c) Describe different network topologies (Lecture c) List and describe different network standards and protocols (Lecture c and e) Describe wireless communication (Lecture d) List and describe network hardware (Lecture d) 2 Health IT Workforce Curriculum Version 3.0/Spring 2012 Introduction to Information and Computer Science Networks Lecture d

Wireless Communications Wireless devices communicate without cabling. Signals sent via: Infrared light – laptop to laptop Microwave – requires clear line of sight Radio frequency - most common method Governed by IEEE standard. Seems to be available everywhere! Health IT Workforce Curriculum Version 3.0/Spring Introduction to Information and Computer Science Networks Lecture d

Wireless – The Good, The Bad, & The Ugly Good: No cables needed to connect devices to network. Cleaner work environment without cables. Devices can be easily moved about. Easy for users to connect. Bad: Can be slower than wired networks. Limited signal range. Ugly: Security issues. Health IT Workforce Curriculum Version 3.0/Spring Introduction to Information and Computer Science Networks Lecture d

How Does Wireless Function Home wireless communication is done by radio frequency. Radio frequencies are mapped to channel numbers. In North America, channels are 1-13 for a/b/g Need the following for typical home setup: Computers need wireless NICs –Facilitates connection to a wireless router. Network needs a wireless router –Also known as a wireless access point (WAP). Wireless router needs to connect to a wired device –To get Internet access, wireless router needs wired connection to the ISP device (cable modem router). Health IT Workforce Curriculum Version 3.0/Spring Introduction to Information and Computer Science Networks Lecture d

Wireless Network Setup WAP: SSID – name for wireless network. Change WAP default password since globally known. IP address and subnet mask. Configure WPA2 and record the code/phrase created. Cable WAP so it somehow connects to ISP device. Each wireless client: SSID configured same as WAP. IP address and subnet mask in same range as WAP. Configure WPA2 using code/phrase from WAP. Health IT Workforce Curriculum Version 3.0/Spring Introduction to Information and Computer Science Networks Lecture d

Wireless Network Setup (cont’d) Standards are backwards compatible g NICs work in a/b device-controlled WLANs. Wireless RF channels WAPs and clients must use same channel. Different channels cannot communicate. Channel numbers correspond to an RF range. Channels 1, 6, and 11 RF do not overlap. Use one of these! –Channel 5 uses the RF range of 2.421–2.443 GHz. –Channel 6 uses the RF range of 2.426–2.448 GHz. Health IT Workforce Curriculum Version 3.0/Spring Introduction to Information and Computer Science Networks Lecture d

Wireless Components Example The notebook is connected to the wireless access point using a PC card. PC card (wireless NIC) Wireless Access Point (WAP) Network cable connection to wired network. (Porao, 2005, CC BY-SA 3.0) Health IT Workforce Curriculum Version 3.0/Spring Introduction to Information and Computer Science Networks Lecture d

Network Hardware Common components are:  Networked devices  NIC (wired and wireless)  Switch  Router  ISP device  Server  Surge protector  Uninterruptable Power System (UPS) Health IT Workforce Curriculum Version 3.0/Spring Introduction to Information and Computer Science Networks Lecture d

Network Hardware - Networked devices Computers / Laptops with: Network-enabled operating system (OS). NIC to connect to switch/router. Cabling for wired network. Health IT Workforce Curriculum Version 3.0/Spring Introduction to Information and Computer Science Networks Lecture d

Network Hardware - NICs Required for network communication Hardware uses OS services to communicate on network. Wired – requires cabling, jacks, switch/router. Wireless – requires WAP and some wired device to communicate with wired devices. Vintage 10 Mbps Ethernet NIC for wired network. (Helix84, 2005, CC BY-SA 3.0) Health IT Workforce Curriculum Version 3.0/Spring Introduction to Information and Computer Science Networks Lecture d 54 Mbps Wireless LAN PCI Card (802.11g). (Wheeler, 2007, CC BY-SA 3.0)

Network Hardware – Switch Very important network component. Devices plug into switch to communicate with each other. Switch plugs into ISP device to provide Internet access. Image shows a 5-port Atlantis Ethernet switch. If this switch connects to an ISP device, with five ports it could also accommodate a printer and three other devices. One of the devices could be a WAP, which would allow wired and wireless clients to communicate with each other. 12 Health IT Workforce Curriculum Version 3.0/Spring 2012 Introduction to Information and Computer Science Networks Lecture d (Sub, 2007, PD-US)

Network Hardware - Router Network boundary defined by IP address and subnet mask numbers. Router connects different IP networks so they can communicate with each other. Routers can be wired or wireless. ISP devices are routers. Image shows a Cisco Linksys WRT54GL wireless router typically found in a SOHO (small office, home office) network. The blue Ethernet cable extending out of its rear, to the right, connects this device to the wired network 13 Health IT Workforce Curriculum Version 3.0/Spring 2012 Introduction to Information and Computer Science Networks Lecture d (Jackzor, 2008, PD-US)

Routed Network Example Small Office / Home Office (Feval, 2006, CC BY-SA 3.0) Health IT Workforce Curriculum Version 3.0/Spring Introduction to Information and Computer Science Networks Lecture d

Network Hardware – ISP Device Connects SOHO and Office networks to Internet. Can lease from ISP with Internet service. Sometimes available for purchase too. Usually has one Internet port to connect to a wall port. Usually has one switch port to connect one device using Ethernet cable. Can use that port to connect to a switch, which can connect to other devices or other switches to extend network. All devices then share the one Internet connection. Health IT Workforce Curriculum Version 3.0/Spring Introduction to Information and Computer Science Networks Lecture d

ISP Device Examples The image on the left shows a Motorola cable modem. This router uses the ISP’s coaxial cable to provide Internet connectivity. The image on the right shows a wireless D-Link router/modem used as a residential DSL gateway. This router uses the ISP’s Ethernet cable to provide Internet connectivity. (Larocomp, 2010, PD-US) Health IT Workforce Curriculum Version 3.0/Spring Introduction to Information and Computer Science Networks Lecture d (Macic7, 2007, CC BY 3.0)

Network Hardware - Server Computer with specialized OS installed. Windows Server 2008 Ubuntu Server Novell Open Enterprise Server Creates ‘gated community’ of devices and users. Server maintains database of objects, restricts access to authorized devices/users, and manages them. Can provide various functions: Domain controller Print server DHCP server DNS server File server Certificate server NAP server Health IT Workforce Curriculum Version 3.0/Spring Introduction to Information and Computer Science Networks Lecture d

Network Hardware – Surge Protector Protects devices from spikes in power usually originating with the power company. Some power strips are also surge protectors – need to carefully read product information to differentiate. Devices need to be plugged in to gain protection. Power surge can destroy a devices circuitry. Protection measured in Joules. Joules define how much electricity the surge protector can absorb without failure. Should consult electrician to protect hardware. Health IT Workforce Curriculum Version 3.0/Spring Introduction to Information and Computer Science Networks Lecture d

Network Hardware - UPS Uninterruptible power supply (UPS) provides emergency power to attached devices when power fails. Short battery power time (5-30 min.) depending on attached devices. Computer and monitor – portable unit okay. Whole building – need large (site) solution. Never plug laser printer into UPS. Due to power requirements, will instantly drain available UPS battery power. Health IT Workforce Curriculum Version 3.0/Spring Introduction to Information and Computer Science Networks Lecture d

Surge Protector & UPS Examples (Amakuru, 2006, CC BY-SA 3.0) Health IT Workforce Curriculum Version 3.0/Spring Introduction to Information and Computer Science Networks Lecture d (Cgxke, 2008, PD-US) (Amakuru, 2006, CC BY-SA 3.0)

Networks Summary – Lecture d Describe wireless communication List and describe network hardware Health IT Workforce Curriculum Version 3.0/Spring Introduction to Information and Computer Science Networks Lecture d

Networks References – Lecture d References Wikipedia. Medical Implant Communication Service. [Internet] Jun [cited 2011 Nov 07]. Available from: Wikipedia. Wireless LAN. [Internet] Jun [cited 2011 Nov 07]. Available from: Wikipedia. Network switch. [Internet] Jun [cited 2011 Nov 07]. Available from: Wikipedia. Surge protector. [Internet] Jun [cited 2011 Nov 07]. Available from: Wikipedia. Uninterruptible power supply. [Internet] Jun [cited 2011 Nov 07]. Available from: Health IT Workforce Curriculum Version 3.0/Spring Introduction to Information and Computer Science Networks Lecture d

Networks References – Lecture d Images Slide 8: Wireless Network Components [image on the Internet]. (Porao, 2005, CC BY-SA 3.0) [cited 2011 Nov 07]. Retrieved Jan 2012 from: Slide 11: Network Interface Card [image on the Internet]. (Helix84, 2005, CC BY-SA 3.0) [cited 2011 Nov 07]. Retrieved Jan 2012 from: Slide 11: Wireless Interface Card [image on the Internet]. (Wheeler, 2007, CC BY-SA 3.0) [cited 2011 Nov 07]. Retrieved Jan 2012 from: Slide 12: Network Switch [image on the Internet]. (Sub, 2007, PD-US) [cited 2011 Nov 07]. Retrieved Jan 2012 from: Slide 13: Cisco Linksys Wireless Router [image on the Internet]. c2008 [cited 2011 Nov 07]. Retrieved Jan 2012 from: Slide 14: SOHO Wireless Network [image on the Internet]. (Feval, 2006, CC BY-SA 3.0) [cited 2011 Nov 07]. Retrieved Jan 2012 from: Slide 16: Motorola Cable Modem Router [image on the Internet]. (Larocomp, 2010, PD-US) [cited 2011 Nov 07]. Retrieved Jan 2012 from: Slide 16: D-Link Wireless Router [image on the Internet]. (Macic7, 2007, CC BY 3.0) [cited 2011 Nov 07]. Retrieved Jan 2012 from: Slide 20: Large UPS Device [image on the Internet]. (Cgxke, 20087, PD-US) [cited 2011 Nov 07]. Retrieved Jan 2012 from: Slide 20: Small UPS Device [image on the Internet]. (Amakuru, 2006, CC BY-SA 3.0) [cited 2011 Nov 07]. Retrieved Jan 2012 from: Slide 20: Multi-outlet Surge Protector [image on the Internet]. (Amakuru, 2006, CC BY-SA 3.0) [cited 2011 Nov 07]. Retrieved Jan 2012 from: Health IT Workforce Curriculum Version 3.0/Spring Introduction to Information and Computer Science Networks Lecture d