Chapter 6
Telecommunications
and Networks
Network Concepts
◼ A network is an interconnected or interrelated
chain, group, or system
◼ The number of possible connections on a
network is N(N–1) or N2 –N
N = number of nodes (points of connection)
Example: 10 computers on a network =
10(10–1)
= 10x9 = 90 possible connections
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Metcalfe’s Law
◼ The usefulness, or utility, of a network equals
the square of the number of users
The more users on a network, the more useful
it becomes
◼ Until critical mass is reached, a change in
technology only affects the technology
Once critical mass is attained, social, political,
and economic systems change
Example: The Internet is growing
exponentially. We can expect more value, for
less cost, virtually every time we log on.
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Telecommunication
◼ Exchange of information in any form (voice, data,
text, images, audio, video) over networks.
◼ The Internet is the most widely visible form of
telecommunications in your daily lives.
◼ The competitive arena for telecommunications
service has changed dramatically in recent years.
◼ Telecommunications industry has changed from
government-regulated monopolies to a
deregulated market with fiercely competitive
suppliers of telecommunications services.
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Telecommunication Trends
Chapter 6 Telecommunications and Networks 5
Telecommunications-Based
Services
Chapter 6 Telecommunications and Networks 6
Open Systems
◼ Open systems use common standards for
hardware, software, applications, and networks
Internet networking technologies are a common
standard for open systems
Open systems provide greater connectivity
and network interoperability
◼ Connectivity
Ability of networked computers and other
devices to access and communicate with one
another easily and share information.
Middleware may be needed to help diverse
systems work together
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Middleware
◼ Middleware
A general term for any programming that
mediates between two separate programs
Allows a particular database to access other
databases without custom programming
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Middleware
Commonly known as the “plumbing” of an information
system
I. It routes data and information between back-end
data sources and end user applications
II. An essential component of any IT infrastructure
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Digital Network Technologies
◼ Telecommunications are being revolutionized by
switch from analog to digital
Analog: voice-oriented transmission
Digital: discrete pulse transmission
◼ Benefits
Higher transmission speeds
Moves larger amounts of information
Greater economy and much lower error rates
Transmits multiple types of communications
(data, voice, video) on the same circuits
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Wireless Technologies
◼ Fiber-optic
Uses pulses of laser-generated light
Reduced size and installation effort
Vastly greater communication capacity
Faster transmission speeds
Freedom from electrical interference
◼ Satellite Transmission
Can move massive quantities of data, audio,
and video over global networks
Especially useful in isolated areas
11
Wireless Technologies
◼ Terrestrial Microwave
Earthbound microwave systems transmit high-speed
radio signals
Follows a line-of-sight path between relay systems
spaced about 30 miles apart
◼ Communications Satellites
Serve as relay stations
Use microwave radio signals
Earth stations beam signals to the satellites
Not suitable for interactive, real-time processing
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Wireless Technologies
◼ Cellular and PCS Telephone and Pager Systems
Geographic areas are divided into cells
Each cell has a low-power transmitter or radio relay
antenna
Computers and other communications processors
coordinate and control the transmissions to and from
mobile users
◼ Wireless LANS
Uses wireless radio-wave technology to connect PCs
within an office or a building
Can be high-frequency, similar to digital cellular, or low
frequency (spread spectrum)
Chapter 6 Telecommunications and Networks 13
Wireless Technologies
◼ Bluetooth
Short-range wireless technology
Connects PCs to devices, such as a printer
Fairly low cost to implement
◼ Other Wireless Systems
Cellular phones
Mobile radio
PDAs
◼ Telecommunications networks now play vital and pervasive
roles in
Web-enabled e-business processes
Electronic commerce
Enterprise collaboration
Other applications that support business operations,
management,
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Value of Telecommunications
Networks
Chapter 6 Telecommunications and Networks 15
The Internet Revolution
◼ The Internet has become a global information
superhighway
Millions of smaller, private networks operating
independent of, or in harmony with, each
other
10 servers in 1991 to over 46 million in 2003
Sustained growth in excess of 1 million
servers per month
No central computer system
No governing body
Based on common standards
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Internet Service Providers
◼ ISP
A company that specializes in providing easy
access to the Internet
For a monthly fee, provides software, user
name, password, and Internet access
◼ ISPs themselves are connected to one another
through network access points
One ISP can easily connect to another to
obtain addresses of websites or user nodes
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Internet Applications
◼ Most popular Internet applications and uses
E-mail
Instant messaging
Browsing the Web
Newsgroups
Chat rooms
Publish opinions, subject matter, creative work
Buy and sell
Downloading (data, software, reports, pictures,
music, videos)
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Business Use of the Internet
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Business Value of the Internet
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The Role of Intranets
◼ Many companies have sophisticated and
widespread intranets, offering…
Detailed data retrieval
Collaboration
Personalized customer profiles
Links to the Internet
◼ Intranets use Internet technologies
Web browsers and servers
TCP/IP network protocols
HTML publishing and databases
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Intranets
◼ Intranets are protected by…
Passwords
Encryption
Firewalls
◼ Customers, suppliers, and other business
partners can access an intranet via extranet
links
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Business Value of Intranets
◼ Intranets support
Communications and collaboration
Business operations and management
Web publishing
Intranet portal management
Chapter 6 Telecommunications and Networks 23
Extranets
◼ Network links that use Internet technologies to
connect the intranet of a business to the
intranets of another
◼ Virtual Private Networks
Direct private network links, or private secure
Internet links between companies
◼ Unsecured Extranet
Link between a company and others via the
Internet, relying on encryption of sensitive
data and firewall security systems
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Extranet Connectivity
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Business Value of Extranets
◼ Web browser technology makes customer and
supplier access to intranets easier and faster
◼ Another way to build and strengthen strategic
relationships
◼ Enables and improves collaboration between a
business, customers, and partners
◼ Facilitates online, interactive product development
and marketing
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Network Component Alternatives
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Types of Communications Networks
◼ Primary types of communications networks
Wide Area
Local Area
Virtual Private
Client/Server
Peer-to-peer
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Wide Area Network (WAN)
◼ Telecommunication network that covers a large
geographic area
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Local Area Network (LAN)
◼ Connects
computers
within a limited
physical area,
such as an
office,
classroom, or
building
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Virtual Private Networks (VPN)
◼ Used to establish secure intranets and extranets
The Internet is the main backbone network
Relies on network firewalls, encryption, and
other security features to build a “pipe”
through the Internet
Creates a private network without the high
cost of a separate proprietary connection
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Virtual Private Network
Chapter 6 Telecommunications and Networks 32
Client/Server Networks
◼ Clients
End user personal computers or networked
computers
◼ Servers
Used to manage the networks
◼ Processing
Shared between the clients and servers
Sometimes called a two-tier architecture
◼ Larger computer systems are being replaced with
multiple client/server networks
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Client/Server Network
Chapter 6 Telecommunications and Networks 34
Peer-to-Peer Networks
◼ Central Server Architecture
P2P file-sharing software connects all PCs
to a central server
When a PC requests a file, the server searches
all active peers on the network
The server sends the requesting PC a list of
links to all active peers who have the file
Clicking a link connects the two PCs and
automatically transfers the file to the
requesting PC
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Peer-to-Peer Networks
◼ Pure Peer-to-Peer Architecture
No central directory or server
File-sharing software connects one PC to
another online user
When you request a file, the software
searches every online user and sends you a
list of active file names
Clicking a link automatically transfers the file
from that user’s hard drive to yours
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Central Server Peer-to-Peer
Networks
◼ Advantages
Can better protect the integrity and security
of the content and users of the network
◼ Disadvantages
Directory server can be slowed or
overwhelmed by too many users or technical
problems
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Peer-to-Peer Network Diagrams
Chapter 6 Telecommunications and Networks 38
Digital and Analog Signals
◼ Analog or digital refers to the method used to
convert information into an electrical signal
Analog: an electrical current is generated that
is proportional to the quantity being observed
Digital: the quantity being observed is
expressed as a number
◼ Analog: if the temperature is 83 degrees, a
measuring device would generate 8.3 volts
◼ Digital: a measurement of 83 degrees
would be displayed as the number 83
Chapter 6 Telecommunications and Networks 39
Telecommunications Media
◼ Twisted-Pair Wire
Ordinary telephone wire
Copper wire is twisted into pairs
◼ Coaxial Cable
Sturdy copper or
aluminum wire wrapped
with spacers to insulate
and protect it
◼ Fiber-Optic Cable
One or more hair-thin
filaments of glass
fiber wrapped in a
protective jacket
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The Problem of “The Last Mile”
◼ Network providers use fiber optic cable as a
communications backbone
Houses connected to the backbone are wired
with twisted pair
Users don’t benefit from the faster, better
technology
Chapter 6 Telecommunications and Networks 41
Telecommunications Processors
◼ Modems
The most common type of communications
processor
Converts a digital signal to an analog
frequency that can be transmitted over phone
lines, then back into a digital signal
◼ Modulation and demodulation
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Network Management Functions
◼ Traffic Management
Manage network resources and traffic to
avoid congestion and optimize service levels
◼ Security
Provide authentication, encryption, firewall, auditing,
and enforcement
◼ Network Monitoring
Troubleshoot and watch over the network, alerting
administrators of potential problems
◼ Capacity Planning
Survey network resources, traffic patterns, and users’
needs
Determine the best way to accommodate the needs
of the network as it grows and changes
Chapter 6 Telecommunications and Networks 43
Network Topologies
◼ Topology - The structure of a network
◼ Star Network - Ties end user computers to a central
computer
◼ Ring Network - Ties local computer processors together
in a ring on a relatively equal basis
◼ Bus Network - Local processors share the same
communications channel
◼ Mesh Network - Uses direct communications lines to
connect some or all of the computers in the ring to
each other
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Network Topologies
Chapter 6 Telecommunications and Networks 45
Voice Over IP
◼ Internet Telephony
Using an Internet connection to pass voice
data using IP instead of a telephone network
Often referred to as voice over IP or VoIP
Works like a regular phone, but skips long-
distance charges
Runs over standard network infrastructure
Requires a well-configured network to work
smoothly
Chapter 6 Telecommunications and Networks 46
Bandwidth
◼ Bandwidth
The frequency range of a telecommunications
channel that determines the maximum
transmission rate
Speed and capacity typically measured in bits
per second (bps)
Sometimes call baud rate
◼ Transmission Rates
Narrow-band = low speed
Broadband = high speed
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Transmission Speeds
Chapter 6 Telecommunications and Networks 48
Network Interoperability
◼ Ensures that anyone anywhere on one network
can communicate with anyone anywhere on
another network
From a telecommunications perspective, no
need to speak a common language
◼ Telecommunications would be possible without
Complete accessibility
Transparency
Seamless interoperability across all networks
Chapter 6 Telecommunications and Networks 49