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CIS-325 Data Communications Dr. L. G. Williams, Instructor CIS-325: Data Communications 1 Chapter Two Business Information CIS-325: Data Communications 2 Data Forms Digital Analog CIS-325: Data Communications 3 Digital Data Represented as a sequence of discrete symbols from a finite “alphabet” of text and/or digits Rate and capacity of a digital channel measured in bits per second (bps) Digital data is binary: uses 1s and 0s to represent everything Binary digits can be represented as voltage pulses CIS-325: Data Communications 4 Basic Digital Terms Bit: – – – – digit in a binary number Can only have a value of 1 or 0 1 is a 1-bit number (=1 in base 10) 10 is a 2-bit number (=2 in base 10) 10011001 is an 8-bit number (=153 in base 10) Byte: eight bits CIS-325: Data Communications 5 Analog Data Continuous signal Expressed as an oscillation (sine wave format) of frequency Example: Analog electrical signal generated by a microphone in response to continuos changes in air pressure that make up sounds CIS-325: Data Communications 6 Basic Analog Terms Wave frequency: Number of times a cycle occurs in given time period Wave amplitude: Height of a wave cycle Hertz: The number of times a wave cycle occurs in one second (commonly used measure of frequency) CIS-325: Data Communications 7 amplitude (volts) Analog Signaling represented by sine waves 1 cycle phase difference time (sec) frequency (hertz) = cycles per second CIS-325: Data Communications 8 Analog Voice Communication Primarily used for transmission of human voice (telephony) Microphone captures voice vibrations, converts them to waves than can be expressed through variations of voltage Examples – Telephone (3000Hz) – Hi-Fi Sound (15,000Hz; approximate range of human ear) – Compact Disc (20,000Hz for each of two channels) CIS-325: Data Communications 9 Digital Voice Communication For good representation, must sample amplitude at a rate of at least twice the maximum frequency Measured in samples per second, or smp/sec Telephone quality: 8000smp/sec, each sample using 8 bits – 8 bits * 8000smp/sec = 64kbps to transmit CD audio quality: 44000smp/sec, each sample using 16 bits – 16 bits * 44000smp/sec = 1.41mbps to transmit clearly CIS-325: Data Communications 10 Voice Means Telephones Private Branch Exchange (PBX) – On-premises switch – Single connection to outside Centrex – Offered by phone company – Each phone line runs to outside switch – Appears to work just like PBX CIS-325: Data Communications 11 Data Communication In this context, we mean data stored on computers Already digital, so no conversion necessary Bandwidth usually affects speed, but not quality Each character represented by a byte Make transmission faster through compression CIS-325: Data Communications 12 Image Transfer Pictures, charts, drawings Used by fax, CAD, publishing Images result in large files CIS-325: Data Communications 13 Converting Images Break image up into small units – More units means more detail – Units called pixels CIS-325: Data Communications 14 Image Quality Issues More pixels=better quality More compression=reduced quality – “Lossy” gives from 10:1 to 20:1 compression – “Lossless” gives less than 5:1 Less compression=reduced speed of transfer Choices in imaging technology, conversion, and communication all affect end-user’s satisfaction CIS-325: Data Communications 15 Video Communication Sequences of images over time Same concept as image, but with the dimension of time added Significantly higher bandwidth requirements in order to send images (frames) quickly enough Similarity of adjacent frames allows for high compression rates CIS-325: Data Communications 16 Bandwidth Requirements Review chart on page 27 What happens when bandwidth is insufficient? Poor quality or slow transmission Response time How long does it take to become impatient? Is data communication ever “fast enough”? CIS-325: Data Communications 17