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Modems and Beyond Chapter 5 Copyright 2001 Prentice Hall Revision 2: July 2001
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2 Modems n Problem – Computer (device)is digital – Telephone line is analog – Need translation device called a modem n Modulation: converting outgoing digital device signals to analog transmission line signals n Demodulation: converting incoming analog transmission line signals into digital device signals Digital Signal Modem Analog Signal
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3 Modulation n Example: Frequency Modulation – 1 is a high-frequency vibration – 0 is a low-frequency vibration 1 0 1 1
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4 Modem Forms n Internal Modem – On printed circuit board inside PC – Does not take up desktop space – Complex access--must open computer Phone Line to Telephone Phone Line to Wall Jack
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5 Modem Forms n External Modem – Easy to install (just plug into serial port) – Takes up desk space – Needs wire to serial port (wiring clutter) – Needs electrical power Phone Line to Telephone Wall Power: usually uses “brick” transformer Serial Cable to Serial Port Phone Line to Wall Jack
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6 Modem Forms n PC Card Modems – Fit in PC Card slots on notebooks – Easy to install – Do not take up desktop space – Expensive – Few desktop PCs have PC Card slots
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7 Modem Standards n Two Modems Must Follow Same Standards – Modern modem standards are created by the ITU-T – Speed standards (modulation method) – Error correction and compression standards – Facsimile standards n Training Period – When two modems first start talking, they negotiate standards to use; settle on highest common standards
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8 Modem Speed Standards (ITU-T) n V.90 – Receive at 56 kbps but send at only 33.6 kbps – Not all phone lines, ISPs support 56 kbps – Fall back to 33.6 kbps if cannot support n V.34 – 33.6 kbps send and receive n V.32 bis – 14.4 kbps send and receive – bis means second (version of the standard)
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9 Modem Standards: Error Correction and Compression n ITU-T – V.42: Error detection and correction – V.42 bis: Compression (up to 4:1) – Most newer modems have both
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10 Modem Standards n Facsimile Modem Standards – Most modems also act as fax modems – Facsimile requires different modulation than data transmission – V.14: 14.4 kbps – V.29: 9.6 kbps
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11 New Modem Standards n V.92 – Can transmit faster than 33.6 kbps but only if the line has unusually high top frequency cutoff – If transmits faster, reception speed falls below 56 kbps – Modem on hold: can talk a short time without breaking the connection – Cuts call setup time in half n V.44 – Can compress webpages better, cutting download time in half.
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12 V.90 Modems n Telephone Bandwidth is Limited – Limits speed to about 35 kbps n Upload (Sending) Speed is Limited – Analog-to-digital converter (ADC) at the telephone company filters & converts your incoming signal – Limits you to about 35 kbps 35 kbps Telephone Network Telephone Network ADC PC V.90 modem 33.6 kbps
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13 V.90 Modems n However, Receive at 56 kbps – ISP connects with digital line to the Telco – Sends at 56 kbps – No analog-to-digital converter to filter and so limit speed Telephone Network Telephone Network DAC PC V.90 modem ISP Digital Link No ADC! 56 kbps
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14 V.90 Modems n Receive at 56 kbps – 56 kbps digital channels inside phone network – Only local loop is analog today – Trunk lines and switches support 56 kbps transmission Telephone Network Telephone Network DAC PC V.90 modem ISP Digital Switches and Trunk Lines 56 kbps
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15 V.90 Modems n Receive at 56 kbps – Telephone company transmits in analog to subscriber at 56 kbps – Digital to analog converter (DAC) does not limit speed to less than 56 kbps. No filtering. Telephone Network Telephone Network DAC PC V.90 modem ISP Digital Link 56 kbps
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16 V.90 Modem n Telephone Company Does Not Have to Do Anything Differently – ADCs and DACs are already in place for ordinary voice service – Lack of change in phone system allowed fast implementation Telephone Network Telephone Network ADC PC V.90 modem ISP Digital Link DAC
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17 V.90 Modem n ISP Does Have to Do Things Differently – Digital line to telephone network – Special equipment at ISP – Does not use a V.90 modem – If used V.90 modem, could only send at 33.6 kbps Telephone Network Telephone Network DAC PC V.90 modem ISP Digital Link No V.90 Modem!
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18 V.90 Modem n User Needs a V.90 Modem – Does not need a new phone line – Not all phone lines will work, but it is never worth the cost to install a new line for V.90 modems
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19 Alternatives to Ordinary Phone Lines & Modems n Faster Speeds; Called Broadband Services n Also Higher Cost – Translation devices more expensive than modems – Faster (more expensive) transmission line to ISP – ISP may charge more because of heavier transmission load – Faster interface than 232 serial port may be needed
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20 Transmission Line Versus ISP n Transmission line may be provided by a transmission carrier, not the ISP – Users have to pay separate fees to carrier and ISP – Some ISPs also provide transmission line – Transmission line costs must always be considered in addition to hardware n External Modem n High-Speed ports
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21 Ports n Need port fast enough for line n 232 Serial port to 115.2 kbps: only V.34, V.90 or ISDN n USB (universal serial bus): 12 Mbps – Available on all new PCs – Faster version coming (USB-2, ~480 Mbps) n Firewire (IEEE 1394) – 400 Mbps and faster – Not available on most new PCs n Ethernet NIC (10 Mbps) – Network interface card used in PC networks – Printed circuit board – Must be installed inside PC systems unit
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22 ISDN n ISDN line from telephone company (dial-up digital service) – Multiplexes (mixes) three channels on one UTP wire pair to the desktop 1101 B Channel B Channel 2B+D Multiplexed Onto One Set of Wires ISDN Modem D Channel: control signals
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23 ISDN n Two B Channels are 64 kbps – Original idea: one for voice, one for data – Can now “bond” the two B channels for 128 kbps data if ISP supports it n D Channel is 16 kbps (for supervisory signaling) Telephone Network Telephone Network ISP ISDN Modem ISDN Modem 128 kbps B B Bonding
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24 ISDN Costs n Must install an ISDN line – Will cost more than telephone line (3X) n Actually, could use your existing phone line – But then would need one B channel for telephony
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25 ISDN Costs n Line is expensive – $60-$80/mo plus installation fee – ISP charge is separate; may charge more for ISDN access n Dial Up: Not always connected – Do not have to pay for full-time use – Good if usage is small per day, say to upload sales data from retail once per night – Good for backup to always-on services n Need “ISDN modem” (expensive)
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26 ISDN Modem n ISDN “Modem” – Modem is for for digital device, analog line – ISDN line is digital – Codec to link analog telephone to digital ISDN line – Data service unit (DSU) to translate between PC digital format and ISDN digital format (voltage levels, timing, etc.) Station Analog Digital Codec Modem DSU
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27 ISDN Modem n Codec – Translates analog device signal into digital signal for propagation – Divides each second into 8,000 sampling periods – Constantly samples the intensity of the voice analog signal in each sample – Measures voice intensity as 8-bit value (0-255) – Sends 8 bits 8,000 times per second (64 kbps) Sample 1/8,000 sec Sampling Period Intensity Value 0110010
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28 DSU (Data Service Unit) n DSU translates between different digital formats – Device and line are both digital, but still must have translator n Different bit rates n Different number of possible states n Different voltage levels for the states n Different ways to represent ones and zeros DSU Digital Line
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29 Cable Modem Service n Service of Cable Television Companies – 10 Mbps downstream n Capacity is shared by multiple subscribers (real throughput 300 – 500 kbps) n Shared within Blocks of 500 Houses – 64 kbps to 256 kbps upstream – Does not tie up telephone line – Always available Cable TV Network Cable TV Network Also ISP Functions Also ISP Functions Cable Modem Cable Modem
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30 Cable Modem Service n Cost is about $50 per Month – Includes ISP service! – Installation usually costs $100 to $150 and includes a cable modem and a network interface card – Cost-competitive with adding a second phone line to handle your modem communication
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31 Digital Subscriber Lines (DSLs) n Offered by Telephone Companies – subscriber lines: connect customer premises to telephone system – Entirely digital – Different subscriber lines for home & business Telephone Network Telephone Network ISP DSL Modem DSL Modem DSL
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32 Digital Subscriber Lines (DSLs) n Residential customers: multiplexes regular phone n Can use existing phone line coming into house n Can use Internet without tying up phone – Most common Asymmetric DSL (ADSL) Telephone Network Telephone Network ISP DSL Modem DSL Modem Existing Phone Line
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33 Digital Subscriber Lines n Lower-speed upstream and higher-speed downstream n About $50 per month includes ISP – Businesses pay more for higher speeds (up to 1.5 Mbps) n DSL service requires DSLAM (Digital Subscriber Line Access Multiplexer) n G.Lite (G.992.2) Standard – Up to 1.5 Mbps downstream speed Telephone Network Telephone Network ISP DSL Modem DSL Modem ADSL 64 or more kbps 384 kbps-640 kbps
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34 Digital Subscriber Lines n Digital Subscriber Line Access Multiplexer – Telephone company must install at end switching office to serve DSL users Telephone Network Telephone Network ISP DSLAM DSL
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35 Digital Subscriber Lines n Splitting Voice and Data – Voice and data are split at home by the DSL modem – Voice and data are also split at the telephone company’s first switching office DSL Modem DSLAM DSL Data Network Voice Network Computer Phone
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36 Wireless Internet Access n Reach the Internet by Radio – Terrestrial (uses earth stations) – Satellite-based ISP
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37 GEO Satellites n In geosynchronous orbit – Appear to be stationary in the sky – 36,000 km (22,300 miles) – Need much power to send/receive – Need dish antennas to concentrate signals – Must point dish at the satellite – Impractical for portable computers
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38 VSATs n Very Small Aperture Terminals (VSATs) – Small dishes (1 meter in diameter or less) – Do not concentrate signal as well as large dishes, so inefficient – Less precise focus then large dishes, satellites cannot be spaced closely together – However, inexpensive – Used when there must be many ground stations
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39 LEO Satellites n Low Earth Orbit (LEO) Satellites – Below First Van Allen Radiation band, peaks at 3,000 km (1,800 miles) – A typical orbit is 1,000 km or 600 miles n Medium Earth Orbit (MEO) Satellites – Between 1st and 2 nd Van Allen Radiation Band, peaks at 15,000 km (about 9,000 miles) – Typical distance is 6,000 km or 4,000 miles – Farther away than LEOs, so need more power – But travel more slowly across sky, so fewer hand- offs, fewer satellites needed Omnidirectional Antenna
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40 Small Office Service n Serial Router Connects Internal Stations to Shared Broadband Access Service Small Office Serial Router Shared Broadband Line ISP
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41 Small Office Service n Serial Routers (Also Called Access Routers) are Very Simple – One or more ports to connect the serial port to the LAN – One port to connect to the high-speed access line, which is serial – Much less expensive than general-purpose routers because no complex router forwarding decision caused by multiple possible output ports Serial Router
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42 Small Office Service n Serial Router Connects Internal Stations to Shared Broadband Access Service – Companies with several stations pay much more for line than when connecting a single PC – Each machine gets its own IP address via DHCP – Serial router may be a user PC with added software – Often, router is called a gateway (the old name for router)
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