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Chapter 4 Telecommunications and Networking Irwin/McGraw-Hill The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 2002. All rights reserved . Chapter Objectives • To understand the basic performance characteristics of telecommunications and networking technologies. • To have an appreciation for the trends in telecommunications technologies and how they influence technology options and decisions. • To understand how it is possible to view telecommunications as an enabler of organizational communications. • To appreciate the potential for distortion in organizational communications, and how information and telecommunication technologies may help to reduce distortion. 2 Organizational Communication • Communication is the sharing of information between two or more entities. • Organizational Communication is the sharing of information related to an organization activity between two or more individuals or organizational units. – Sharing of information implies, collection, analysis, and transmission of information. – Formal and Informal Communication 3 Communication Dyads • A communication network is made of a series of communication dyads. • A dyad consists of – – – – – Sender Receiver Message Channel Medium 4 Distortion in Communication • Communication Distortion is the transformation of the meaning of a message by intentionally or unintentionally altering its content. – Lost – Destroyed – Modified or Altered • Noise consists of disturbances in the communication process that interferes with the intended effect of the message. 5 Types of Distortion • Distortion – Routing – the message gets routed to the wrong receiver or not at all. – Delaying the message – Modifying it the content of the message – Summarizing • Intentional • Unintentional 6 Distortion Type Intentional Unintentional Routing Sending a message to wrong person; news leaks Delaying Purposely waiting for a Not being able to send deadline to go by message due to overload Modifying Changing the message; Forgetting to include destroying data some material in message Summarizing Leaving negative data out 7 Not knowing where to send message; sending to wrong address Not having time to integrate all available material Analog and Digital Data • Analog signals are transmitted as sound waves along a channel such as a copper telephone wire • Digital signals are transmitted as a series of bits or on/off signals • A modem converts digital signals into analog signals and another modem can be used to convert analog signals back to digital signals. • See Figure 4.6 8 Telecommunications • Voice communications require: 1. 2. 3. 4. • • A source device A switching system A data channel A destination device Data communications is used to refer to telecommunications involving computerized data. Data traffic on the Internet doubles every 100 days. 9 Data Channels • Bandwidth is used to describe the capacity of a communications medium • bps, bits per second • kHz, kilohertz and MHz, megahertz – Narrowband (transmission speeds of 64 kbps or less) – Wideband (transmission speeds between 64 kbps and 1.544 Mbps) – Broadband (transmission rates of 1.544 Mbps or higher) 10 Data Channels • Wireline – Twisted pair copper – Coaxial cable (cable television) – Fiber-optic cable • Wireless – – – – Infrared light Cellular telephone (analog or digital) Microwave Satellite (geostationary or low-earth) 11 Communication Protocol • A communication protocol is essentially a set of codes or conventions used for facilitating communications between hardware and software. – IP or Internet Protocol directs packets on the Internet. – TCP or Transmission control protocol puts the packets in their correct sequence. – HTTP or hyper text transfer protocol is used to transmit web pages over the Internet. – Mobile IP provides IP routing for mobile devices. 12 Telecommunications • ISDN or Integrated Services Digital Network is a set of standards that provide additional capabilities for copper wire. • DSL or digital subscriber line technology refers to a a group of methods for transmitting at speeds up to 8 Mbps over copper wire. • Cable Modems allow transmission of Internet traffic through the cable TV network. 13 Telecommunications • T-carrier systems are digital transmission systems that take analog voice circuits and converts them to digital form for transmission. Companies typically lease T lines. • Frame relay carries data packets over the system that vary in length and are referred to as frames. • Fast Ethernet is a protocol that was designed originally local area networks. 14 Networks • A computer network is used to connect multiple uses and computing devices together, using telecommunications technologies. • Three classes of networks – Local Area Network (LAN) – Metropolitan Area Network (MAN) – Wide Area Network (WAN) • Two types of networks – Server-based networks – Peer-to-peer networks 15 LAN Components • LANs employ both wireline and wireless communications – Wireline • Twisted pair cable, Coaxial cable, & Fiber optical cable – Wireless • Infrared light, & Radio waves • A bridge connects two networks of the same type • A router connects several networks • A gateway is used to connect different types of networks. 16 LAN Protocols • Other Network Protocols – Token ring protocol • Used in wired LANs – IEEE 802.11 (WI-FI) • Several variations designed for used in medium range, higher data rate applications. • Range less than 150 yards and 22 Mbps are possible. – Bluetooth is a radio frequency technology designed to provide wireless connectivity to a broad range of devices. • Uses less power than most wireless LAN technologies • Named for Danish King 17 LAN Topologies • Topology is the configuration of the LAN (See Figure 4.15) – Star, Ring, Bus • Performance can be measured by the mode of the connection. – Simplex transmission, messages can be carried in only one direction. – Half-duplex, messages can be carried in both directions just not simultaneously. – Full-duplex, messages can be carried in both directions simultaneously. 18 Intranets and Extranets • An Intranet is a controlled, self contained grouping of information resources that can be accessed using Web browsers. • An Extranet is similar to an Intranet but is designed to facilitate communications between two or more business partners. 19