Copyright 2001, S.D. Personick. All rights reserved1 Telecommunications Networking I Topic 1 Overview of Telecommunications Networking I-II Dr. Stewart.

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Copyright 2001, S.D. Personick. All rights reserved1 Telecommunications Networking I Topic 1 Overview of Telecommunications Networking I-II Dr. Stewart D. Personick Drexel University

Copyright 2001, S.D. Personick. All rights reserved2 Telecommunications Networking Sending and receiving messages (couriers, smoke signals, flashes of light, telegraph, teletype, facsimile, voice mail, text , multimedia ) Real-time conversations and collaborative work (face-to-face, wireline telephone, 2-way radio-telephone, video teleconferencing, multimedia teleconferencing) Accessing stored or real-time information (physical file cabinets and folders, FTP, WWW, remote sensing, imagery) Networked information systems (mission- oriented teams, telnet, client-server, peer-to- peer, distributed computing environments, sensor-to-shooter)

Copyright 2001, S.D. Personick. All rights reserved3 Telecommunications Networking How to communicate in efficient, predictable, reliable, and useful ways? -Representing data or information as a “signal” -Defining the quality (or fidelity) of reception/communication -Signals in the presence of noise, distortion and interference -Point-to-point communication systems -Switched networks (e.g., the Internet, LANs, wireless networks…)

Copyright 2001, S.D. Personick. All rights reserved4 Overview of Telecommunications Networking I Overview of telecommunications Networking I-II Data, information (voice, audio, images, video), and signals that represent data and information Signals in noise, measures of quality of communication Wire-pair and coaxial cable, optical fiber, and wireless transmission systems (link layer) -radio frequency wireless links -lasercom (free-space optical) wireless links Circuit switching and circuit-switched telecommunications networks

Copyright 2001, S.D. Personick. All rights reserved5 Overview of Telecommunications Networking II Wireless systems and networks: peer-to-peer communication using a shared “ether”, broadcast systems, cellular/ PCS, 2-way satellite systems Local area networks (packet switching) The Internet Next generation systems, networks, issues and applications