Title: Intro to Telecom
1Intro to Telecom
2Fig 6.2
3Analog and Digital Signals
Digital signal
Analog signal
Fig. 6.4
- Analog
- Continuous fluctuations over time between high
and low voltage - Digital
- A discrete voltage state
4Fig 6.3
5Source/Signal Combinations
6Basic Modulation Techniques
- Amplitude modulation (AM)
- Converts digital data to analog signals using a
single frequency carrier signal - High-amplitude wave denotes a binary 1
- Low-amplitude wave denotes a binary 0
- Frequency modulation (FM)
- Uses a constant amplitude carrier signal and two
frequencies to distinguish between 1 and 0 - Phase modulation
- Uses a phase shift at transition points in the
carrier frequency to represent 1 or 0
7Examples Analog shifts
8Data Transmission Speeds
- Measured in bits per second (bps)
- Kilobits per second (kbps)
- Megabits per second (Mbps)
- Gigabits per second (Gbps)
9Types of Communications Media
- Guided Media
- Twisted wire cable
- Coaxial cable
- Fiber-optic cable
- Unguided Media
- Microwave transmission - satellite
- Microwave transmission - terrestrial
- Cellular transmission
- Infrared transmission
10Cable/Wire Types
- Twisted Pair Wire
- A cable consisting of pairs of twisted wires
- The twist helps the signal from bleeding into
the next pair - Cheapest
- Limited bandwidth
- Coaxial Cable
- Inner conductor wire surrounded by insulation,
called the dielectric - Dielectric is surrounded by a conductive shield,
which is in turn covered by a layer of
nonconductive insulation, called the jacket - More expensive than twisted pair, but higher
bandwidth
11Twisted Pair
12Coaxial Cable
13Cable/Wire Types, Continued
- Fiber Optic Cable
- Consists of many extremely thin strands of solid
glass or plastic bound together in a sheathing - Transmits signals with light beams
- No risk of sparks, safe for explosive
environments - More expensive than coaxial, but more bandwidth
- Different colors of light are used to
simultaneously send - Multiple signals
14Fiber Optic Cable
15Microwave Transmission
16Satellite
17Cellular
18Table 6.1
19Communications Efficiency
- A large part of telecommunication expense is cost
of the medium - Several approaches are used to efficiently use
the medium - Multiplexing
- Switching
- Compressing
20Multiplexing Time Division and Frequency
Division
Figure 6.14
Time division multiplexing (TDM) is where
multiple incoming signals are sliced into small
time intervals
Frequency division multiplexing (FDM) is where
incoming signals are placed on different
frequency ranges
21Multiplexing Freeway Analogy
- Frequency division multiplexing is analogous to
having a 3-lane freeway. Each car has its own
lane, three cars drive simultaneously in the same
direction. - Time division multiplexing is analogous to a
freeway-onramp cars enter the on-ramp one at a
time, and drive in single file.
22Frequency Division of Cable
Base video width is 4.2 MHz with guard bands 6 MHz
.....
Ch n
Ch 1
Ch 2
Ch 3
Ch 4
Ch 5
Ch 6
The default is 6 Mega Hertz slices of bandwidth
per channel
Cable modem
--Cable Bandwidth--
Cable phone gets 4 KHz slices
Q What limits the bandwidth on coaxial cable?
A The bandwidth of the amplifier.
23Switching
- Switching further advances the objective of
efficiently utilizing the circuit - Two types
- Circuit switching (e.g., public telephone
network) requires end-to-end physical connection - Packet switching (e.g. Internet) breaks up
messages into small packets and routes them
individually. No end-to-end physical connection
required. Can be virtual circuit (all packets
travel through same route) or datagram (packets
may travel through any route)
24Circuit Switching
medium
You
Switch
To communicate a physical connection must be made
and maintained
Your Mom
25Packet Switching
Packets thrown into the internet cloud either
independently find the path from point to point
(datagram) of follow the same path (virtual
circuit)
26The message
Header
Message contents
Trailer
Direction of transmission
Block Check Character
Start of Header
Start of Text
End of Text
SOH
(STX)
(ETX)
BCC
If variable length header used
If variable length message used
27A Simple Protocol Stack
Application Protocol
Application
Application
Transport Protocol
Transport
Transport
Network Access
Network Protocol
Network Access
28A Simple Protocol Stack, Continued
- The application uses the protocol for its
layer/level to determine how it should format its
message for an application at a different
computer - However, it does not worry about getting the
message to the application - The transport layer is responsible for making
sure that the message arrives at the correct
application at the correct computer - However, it does not concern itself with how it
gets there. That is the responsibility of the
network layer. The transport layer is only
concerned with reliability of the communication - The network layer determines how the message
should be presented to the network
29Formatting and Decoding a Message
Protocols strip header information from the
message
Protocols add header information to the message
Application
Application
Data
Transport
Transport
Transport Header
Network Access
Network Access
Network Header
30Communications Protocols
31Relationship of TCP/IP to OSI
TCP/IP
- Controls the users interface and applications
between two hosts, e.g. - File transfer protocol (ftp)
- HTTP (Hypertext trans. protocol)
- Telnet
- SMTP (Simple mail transfer protocol)
- SNMP (Simple Network Mgt protocl)
- NNTP (Net news transport protocol)
Process / Application
Host to Host
TCP Virtual circuit maintained, ack UPD No
acknowledgment
Internet
IP routing, fragmentation, assembly ICMP Above
IP, error handling ARP Address resolution sw to
hw addr RARP hardware to sw address convert
Network Access
Physical layer, such as Ethernet or Token Ring
32Fig 6.23
33Ethernet Evolution
New, taking over
1000 Mbps Gigabit Ethernet
Predominant
100 Mbps Ethernet
Battling ATM
Legacy
Most new installations
10 Mbps Ethernet
Old installations
34Ethernet Pros and Cons
- Operates by contention packets collide
- Inefficient many aborted transmissions
- Rates of only 37 of raw wire speed
- 10 Gbit Ethernet on the way
- Inexpensive
- Simple circuitry
- Cheapest bandwidth ratios
35Token Ring
T
data
40008065402
T
data
36Token Ring Pros and Cons
- Very efficient 75 of raw bandwidth
- A better technology
- Expensive
- Used for mission critical applications like
banking - Lost battle to fast-Ethernet (like beta vs. VHS)
37ATM
- Sends 53-byte cells not variable length packets
like Token Ring and Ethernet - Hardware knows where header ends and data begins
- Speeds up to 622 Mbps
- Predictable throughput rates very reliable,
guaranteed service - Military, Safety valve in nuclear power reactor.
No Delay or Jitter!!!
Header
Body
38ATM Pros and Cons
- Very fast
- Reliable mission critical applications
- Efficient bandwidth gt75 of raw capacity
- No delays or sequence re-configuring
- Very expensive and complex
- Not compatible with 10/100 Mbps Ethernet
installations - Most applications do need this efficient
management of data cells only messages used in
real time need ATM
Header
Body
39Connectivity
Type Bandwidth Users Rel.Cost Modem 28.kbps 1
-5 1 DSL 256 Kbps 1-50 2 ISDN 128
Kbps 5-50 3 T1 (DS1) 1.54 Mbps 50-500 10 T3
(DS3) 45 Mbps 4000 100 ATM 155-622
Mbps 10,000 200
40Synchronous Optical Network (SONET)
Define Optical Carrier Levels (OC) Basic
transmission rate STS-1 51.84 Mbps OC-3 351.84
Mbps 155.52 Mbps OC-12 12 51.84 Mbps
622.08 Mbps OC-48 2.488 Gbps OC-768 ?????
41Bringing in the fiber
- 48 strands - OC 48
- 96 strands - OC 96
- Dense Wave Division Multiplexing 48 strands can
yield OC 192 - Optical Switches do not convert from light to
electricity and back to light. 100 light.
42Current Status Fiber
- Massive investments by telecoms in 1990s.
- Current fiber utilization at 2.5!!!!
- Mostly between major corporate infrastructures in
major cities. CO to CO - Limitations on last mile to smaller
infrastructures - Abundance trickled to equipment manufacturers as
well predicted to last through 2002
43Brief History of Telecom
- 1837 - Invention of the telegraph
- 1876 - Alexander Graham Bell invents the
telephone - 1876 - Edison invents the electric bulb and the
phonograph - 1880 - American Bell founded
- 1892 - Telephone system regulation begins in
Canada - 1893 - Broadcasting was started in Budapest.
- 1906 - Lee de Forest invents the vacuum tube.
- 1910 - Interstate Commerce Commission starts to
regulate telcos - 1914 - Underground cables link Boston, NYC and
Washington - 1925 - Bell Telephone Laboratories founded
- 1930 - ATT introduces much higher quality
insulated wire - 1934 - Federal Communications Commission (FCC)
founded - 1945 - ATT lays 2000 miles of coax cable
- 1952 - The first database was implemented on
RCA's Bizmac computer - 1954 - Gene Amdahl developed the first computer
operating system for the IBM 704. - 1968 - Carterfone court decision permits non-Bell
telephone equipment to be used - 1970 - Court permits MCI to provide long-distance
services - 1984 - Breakup of ATT 1984 - Cellular phones
enter service - 1996 - Telecommunications Act of 1996 deregulates
U.S. telephone system