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Data Transmission
The transportation of any
kind of information, from one place to another by physical means. In computer terminology, this means sending streams of bits or bytes from one location to another location using technologies such as copper wire, fiber optics, lasers, radio, or infrared light.
Data Transmission
Data transmission
involves the communication of digital messages between digital devices. Signals are sent via a network to external devices, such as printers or other computers.
Same as line, link, or pipe Requires special hardware that transmits the digital information between computers
Transmission Channels
Transmission
channels are pathways that transfer data Three Transmission Modes used to exchange data: 1. Simplex Data flows in only one direction from the transmitter device to the receiver device 2. Half-duplex Half-duplex mode allows data to move in either direction, but each device must take turns in using the line 3. Full-duplex mode With full-duplex transmission, data can flow in both directions simultaneously.
Transmission Channels
Three Transmission
wire contains two insulated copper wires twisted around each other One twisted-pair line provides POTS Plain old telephone service: analog line that permits voice service Another service is DSL Digital subscriber line
the cable in cable television Minimum signal distortion Has a very wide pipe Hundreds of times faster than POTS 100 times faster than ISDN Need a cable modem
data via microwave or radio signals Transmission is line-ofsight Use transceivers/repeater stations Satellites
Eliminates line-of-sight limitation Geosynchronous orbit set at 22,300 miles above earth
data as lasergenerated pulses of light Foundation transmission medium for Internet backbone Better for data security Future technology looks like very big pipe
protocols Rules that govern the way data are transmitted TCP/IP (Transmission Control Protocol/Internet)
Protocol
uses start and stop bits to signify the beginning and end of a transmission. The start and stop bits must be of opposite polarity. This allows the receiver to recognize when the second packet of information is being sent.
uses no start and stop bits but instead synchronizes transmission speeds at both the receiving and sending end of the transmission. A continual stream of data is then sent between the two nodes.
Asynchronous Transmission
Synchronous Transmission
Acheron Parthenopaeus
There are three kinds of family: those we are born to, those who are born to us, and those we let into our hearts.
- Simi Parthenopaeus