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Data Communication Systems and Networks CSCI 465 Martin van Bommel Lecture 1.

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Presentation on theme: "Data Communication Systems and Networks CSCI 465 Martin van Bommel Lecture 1."— Presentation transcript:

1 Data Communication Systems and Networks CSCI 465 Martin van Bommel Lecture 1

2 Data & Information What is data? – Elements that can be represented by a finite set of symbols, such as digits or alphabets What is information? – a tangible, measurable thing – a subjective construction

3 What Is Communication? Symbolic Representational – “The map is not the territory.” – Communication is only as good as the representation Examples – spoken language, gestures, actions, icons

4 Human Communication vs. Data Communication Human communication is richer, less predictable – Words vary in meaning with context – Many factors influence meaning and perception of message Data communication is more precise – Exact replication of information – Computers do not interpret, they simply relay

5 Telecommunication Uses electricity to transmit messages Speed of electricity dramatically extends reach – Sound waves: ~670 mph – Electricity: ~186,000 (speed of light) Bandwidth= information-carrying capacity of a channel

6 Data Communication Adding storage overcomes time constraints Store-and-forward communication – E-mail – voice mail – facsimile – file transfer – WWW

7 Information and Communication Companies depend on generation and movement of information Communications technology fundamental Enables reshaping of corporations – Communication technology driving change – Allows geographical dispersal Becomes management nightmare

8 Information Communication Voice communications - telephone – PSTN and PBX Data communications - text and numbers Image communications - fax and beyond Video communications - videoconferencing

9 Data Communications, Data Networks, and the Internet “The fundamental problem of communication is that of reproducing at one point either exactly or approximately a message selected at another point” The Mathematical Theory of Communication by Claude Shannon

10 Changes in Networking Technology Emergence of high-speed LANs – Centralized servers, distributed workgroups – High-speed local backbones Corporate WAN needsCorporate WAN needs – Data intensive applications spread across wide geographical areas Digital electronics – Much higher bandwidth required for video/image

11 Three Layer Model for Enterprise Communication Applications – Seen by end users – Voice, email, IM, image, video, collaborations Enterprise services – Design, maintenance, and support of apps – Capacity management and QoS provisions Infrastructure – Communication links, LANs, WANs, Internet access

12 Convergence of Communication Facilities - Benefits Efficiency – Better use of existing resources – Centralized capacity planning, asset management, and policy management Effectiveness – Flexibility, mobility, enhanced connectivity – Rapid standardized service deployment Transformation – Enterprise-wide adoption of global standards

13 Communications Model

14 Communication Tasks Transmission system utilizationAddressing InterfacingRouting Signal generationRecovery SynchronizationMessage formatting Exchange managementSecurity Error detection and correctionNetwork management Flow control

15 Data Communications Model

16 Transmission Lines The basic building block of any communications facility is the transmission line. The business manager is concerned with a facility providing the required capacity, with acceptable reliability, at minimum cost. The business manager is concerned with a facility providing the required capacity, with acceptable reliability, at minimum cost. However, the use of compression, multiplexing, load sharing, and other line features can significantly affect the end choice However, the use of compression, multiplexing, load sharing, and other line features can significantly affect the end choice

17 Transmission Media Convert electronic signal to transmit over some medium – Twisted-pair, coaxial cable, optical fiber cable, terrestrial and satellite microwave (wireless)

18 Data Transmission Communication techniques – analog vs digital, synchronous vs asynchronous – modulation, flow control, interfaces – error detection and correction – Multiplexing and compression

19 Networks LAN - Local Area Network – single building or cluster of buildings – ethernet, token ring, star, wireless WAN - Wide Area Network – city-to-city, country-to-country – telephone, ISDN, ATM, etc. Wireless Network – radio, microwave, satellite

20 Internet Internet evolved from ARPANET Developed to solve the dilemma of communicating across arbitrary, multiple, packet-switched network TCP/IP provides the foundation

21 Internet – Key Elements

22 Internet Architecture

23 Network Configuration


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