EE 104: Introduction to Communications Professor Andrea Goldsmith.
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Transcript of EE 104: Introduction to Communications Professor Andrea Goldsmith.
Outline
Course Information and Policies
Communication Systems Today
Future Systems
Design Challenges
Course Information(see web or handout for more details)
Instructor: Andrea Goldsmith, Packard 371, andrea@ee, Ext: 56932, OHs: W 11am-12pm, Th 5:30-6:30.
Class Homepage: www.stanford.edu/class/ee104 TAs:
Jaron Charles, jcharles@stanford, OHs: Th 7-9pm, Email W 8:30-9:30pm
Nikola Stikov, nikola@stanford, OHs: F 11am-1pm, Email Th 6-7pm
Class mailing list: ee104-students (automatic for registered students), ee104-staff for instructor/TAs, guest list available
Discussion Section: W 6:15-7:15pm; not televised Book: An Introduction to Analog and Digital
Communications
Grading: HWs 30%, Midterm 30%, Final 40% No Lectures Jan. 15 and Feb. 24
Other lectures that week start at 12:50pm, or can schedule makeups
Class Policies Exam policy: Exams must be taken at their
scheduled times. Exceptions only in very rare circumstances. Midterm: 2/12 from 12:30-2:05 Final: 3/20 from 8:30-11:30am.
HW policy: Assigned Friday, due following Friday. Lose 25% credit
per day late. Up to 3 students can collaborate on 1 writeup. All
collaborators must work out all problems.
SITN students: HWs must be faxed or postmarked by HW deadline for
regular students. Exceptions must be cleared in advance.
Exams must be taken at same time as for regular students.
Communication Systems
Provide for electronic exchange of multimedia dataVoice, data, video, music, email, web pages, etc.
Communication Systems TodayRadio and TV broadcasting (covered later in the
course)Public Switched Telephone Network (voice,fax,modem)Cellular Phones Computer networks (LANs, WANs, and the Internet)Satellite systems (pagers, voice/data, movie
broadcasts)Bluetooth
PSTN Design
Local exchange Handles local callsRoutes long distance calls over high-speed lines
Circuit switched network tailored for voice Faxes and modems modulate data for voice
channel DSL uses advanced modulation to get 1.5 Mbps
Local SwitchingOffice (Exchange)
Local SwitchingOffice (Exchange)
Long Distance Lines(Fiber)Local Line
(Twisted Pair)
FaxModem
Cellular System Basics
Geographic region divided into cells Frequencies/timeslots/codes reused at spatially-separated locations (analog systems use FD, digital
use TD or CD) Co-channel interference between same color cells. Handoff and control coordinated through cell base stations
BASESTATION
Local Area Networks (LANs)
LANs connect “local” computers Breaks data into packets Packet switching (no dedicated channels) Proprietary protocols (access,routing, etc.)
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Wireless Local Area Networks (WLANs)
WLANs connect “local” computers (100m range)
Breaks data into packets Channel access is shared (random
access) Backbone Internet provides best-
effort service
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InternetAccessPoint
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Wide Area Networks:The Internet
Many LANs and MANs bridged together
Universal protocol: TCP/IP (packet based).
Guaranteed rates or delays cannot be provided.
Hard to support user mobility. Highly scalable and flexible topology
01011011 Internet
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Bridge MANLAN
Satellite andFiber Lines
Bridge LAN
Satellite Systems
Cover very large areas Different orbit heights
Geosynchronous (GEO) versus low earth orbit (LEO)
Optimized for one-way transmissionPaging, radio and movie broadcast
Most two-way systems struggling or bankruptExpensive alternative to terrestrial systemA few ambitious systems on the horizon
Bluetooth
Cable replacement for electronic devicesCell phones, laptops, PDAs, etc.
Short range connection (10-100 m)1 data (721 Kbps) and 3 voice (56 Kbps)
channelsRudimentary networking capabilities
Future Systems
Nth Generation CellularNth Generation WLANsNth Generation InternetWireless EntertainmentSensor Networks Smart Homes/AppliancesAutomated Cars/FactoriesTelemedicine/LearningAll this and more…
Ubiquitous Communication Among People and Devices
Design Challenges Hardware Design
Precise componentsSmall, lightweight, low powerCheapHigh frequency operation
System DesignConverting and transferring informationHigh data rates Robust to noise and interferenceSupports many users
Network DesignWorldwide anywhere any-time connectivitySpeed
Main Points Communication systems send information
electronically over communication channels
Many different types of systems which convey many different types of information
Design challenges include hardware, system, and network issues
Communication systems recreate transmitted information at receiver with high fidelity
Focus of this class is design and performance of analog and digital communication systems