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Transcript of 6-1 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2007 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
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6-1McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2007 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
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Telecommunications and Networks
Business value of networksThe Internet
Network components
Chapter
6
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2007 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
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6-3
Network Concepts
NetworkAn interconnected chain, group or system
Number of possible connections on a network is N * (N-1)Where N = number of nodes (points of
connections on the network)Example, if there are 10 computers on a
network, there are 10 * 9 = 90 possible connections
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6-4
Telecommunications
TelecommunicationsExchange of information in any form (voice,
data, text, images, audio, video) over networks
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Trends in Telecommunications
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Open Systems
Information systems that use common standards for hardware, software, applications and networks
Internet networking technologies are a common standard for open systems
Connectivity: Ability of networked computers to easily access and
communicate with each other and share information Interoperability:
The ability of an open system to enable end user applications to be accomplished using different varieties of computer systems, software packages, and databases provided by a variety of interconnected networks
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Middleware
Any programming that serves to “glue together” two separate programs
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Digital Network Technologies
Rapid change from analog to digital network technologies
Analog: voice-oriented transmission, sound waves
Digital: discrete pulse transmissionDigital allows:
Higher transmission speedLarger amounts of informationGreater economyLower error ratesMultiple forms of communications on same circuit
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Internet2
Next generation of the InternetHigh-performance networkIn use at 200 universities, scientific
institutions, communications corporations
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Business Value of Telecommunication Networks
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6-11
The Internet
Over 46 million servers (2004)710 – 945 million users (2004)No central computer systemNo governing bodyNo one owns it
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6-12
Internet Service Provider
ISPA company that specializes in providing easy
access to the InternetFor a monthly fee, you get software, user name,
password and accessISPs are connect to one another through
network access points
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6-13
Popular uses of the Internet
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6-14
Using the Internet for business
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6-15
Business value of the Internet
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6-16
An Intranet
A network inside an organizationThat uses Internet technologies (such as Web
browsers and servers, TCP/IP protocols, HTML, etc.)
To provide an Internet-like environment within the organization
For information sharing, communications, collaboration and support of business processes
Protected by security measures Can be accessed by authorized users through
the Internet
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6-17
Enterprise Information Portal
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Extranet
Network links that use Internet technologiesTo connect the Intranet of a businessWith the Intranets of its customers, suppliers or
other business partners
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Extranet Uses
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6-20
Telecommunications network
Any arrangement where a sender transmits a message to a receiver over a channel consisting of some type of medium
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6-21
Telecommunications network components
Terminals: any input/output device that uses networks to transmit or receive data
Telecommunications Processors: devices that support data transmission and reception
Telecommunications Channels: media over which data are transmitted and received
Computers: all sizes and typesTelecommunications Control Software:
programs that control telecommunications activities
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Telecommunications network model
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Wide Area Network (WAN)
Telecommunications network that covers a large geographic area
Source: Courtesy of Cisco Systems Inc.
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6-24
Local Area Network (LAN)
Connect computers within a limited physical area such as an office, classroom, or building
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Virtual Private Networks (VPN)
A secure network that uses the Internet as its backbone but relies on firewalls, encryption and other security
A pipe traveling through the Internet
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6-26
VPN
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6-27
Client/Server networks
Clients: End user personal computers or networked computers
Interconnected by LANsServers: manage networksProcessing shared between clients and
servers
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6-28
Client/Server Network
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6-29
Network Computing
Networks are the central computing resource of the organization
Thin clients: network computers and other clients provide a browser-based user interface
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6-30
Peer-to-peer networks
Networks that connect from one PC to another PC
Common use is the downloading and trading of files
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Telecommunications Media
Twisted-pair wire:Ordinary telephone
wireCopper wire
twisted into pairs
Source: Phil Degginger/Getty Images.
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Telecommunications Media
Coaxial cable:Sturdy copper or
aluminum wire wrapped with spacers to insulate and protect it
Source: Ryan McVay/Getty Images.
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Telecommunications Media
Fiber-optic cable:One or more hair-
thin filaments of glass fiber wrapped in a protective jacket
Source: CMCD/Getty Images.
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Problem of “The Last Mile”
Network providers use fiber optic to provide backbone
But houses are connected to the backbone via twisted-pair
Cannot get the benefit of the faster, better technology
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Wireless Technologies
Terrestrial microwaveEarthbound microwave systems that transmit
high-speed radio signals in a line-of-sight pathBetween relay systems spaced approximately
30-miles apartCommunications satellites
Satellite serves as relay stations for communications signals
Uses microwave radio signals
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Wireless Technologies
Cellular and PCS telephone and pager systemsDivide the geographic area into small areas or
cellsEach cell has transmitter or radio relay antenna
to send message from one cell to anotherWireless LANs
Radio signals within an office or buildingConnect PCs to networks
BluetoothShort-range wireless technologyTo connect PC to peripherals such as printer
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Wireless Web
Connect portable communications devices to the Internet
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Telecommunications Processors
ModemsConvert digital signals from a computer into Analog frequencies that can be transmitted over
ordinary telephone lines
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Internetwork Processors
Switch – makes connections between telecommunications circuits in a network
Router – intelligent communications processor that interconnects networks based on different protocols
Hub – a port switching communications processor
Gateway – connects networks using different communications architectures
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Telecommunications Processors
MultiplexerAllows a single communications channel to carry
simultaneous data transmissions from many terminals
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Telecommunications Software
Used by servers and other computers to manage network performance
Network Operating SystemsMiddleware
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Network management functions
Traffic Management – manage network resources and traffic to avoid congestion and optimize service levels to users
Security – provide authentication, encryption, firewall, auditing and enforcement
Network Monitoring – troubleshoot and watch over the network, informing network administrators of potential problems before they occur
Capacity Planning – survey network resources and traffic patterns and users’ needs to determine how best to accommodate the needs of the network as it grows and changes
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Network Topologies
Topology: structure of a network
Star: ties end user computers to a central computer
Ring: ties local computer processors together in a ring on a relatively equal basis
Bus: local processors share the same communications channel
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Network Topologies
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Internet Telephony
Using an Internet connection to pass voice data using IP
Voice over IP (VoIP)Skips standard long-distance phone charges
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Bandwidth
BandwidthFrequency range of a telecommunications
channelDetermines transmission rateClassified in bits per second (bps)
Transmission Rates:Narrow-band – low-speedBroadband – high-speed
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Transmission Speeds
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Network Interoperability
Ensure that anyone anywhere on one networkCan communicateWith anyone anywhere on another network
Telecommunications as discussed in this chapter wouldn’t be possible without interoperability