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Today, A Gameboy for $50, has more computing power than a Cray supercomputer of only 25 years ago. Tom Peters Circle of Innovation.

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Presentation on theme: "Today, A Gameboy for $50, has more computing power than a Cray supercomputer of only 25 years ago. Tom Peters Circle of Innovation."— Presentation transcript:

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2 Today, A Gameboy for $50, has more computing power than a Cray supercomputer of only 25 years ago. Tom Peters Circle of Innovation

3 IT Architecture

4 Although there is always a need for improved technology, the critical resource is intelligent resourceful people who can relate business needs to technology. James J. O’Connor

5 The central core of information technology involves a study of programming languages, algorithms and information structures.

6 Describe Information in terms of: Accuracy Verifiability Completeness Relevance Timeliness

7 Computers Supercomputer Main Frame Mini Computer PC’s Thin Clients Laptops and Notebooks Palmtops / PDA’s Smart Cards

8 Input Devices

9 Output Devices

10 Cable Media Shielded Twisted Pair Unshielded Twisted Pair Coax Fiber

11 Wireless Media Microwave Satellite –GEO –MEO –LEO GPS Radio Infrared Cellular

12 Networks WAN LAN PAN VPN

13 LAN

14 WAN’s Network which incorporates extended geographical boundaries Network which has a centralized point of data exchange Network which joins remote networks in increase productivity Network which extends existing resources

15 Networking Standards – OSI Model Layer 1: Physical Layer Layer 2: Data Link layer Layer 3: Network Layer Layer 4: Transport Layer Layer 5: Session Layer Layer 6: Presentation Layer Layer 7: Application Layer OSI Example Business Model

16 Equipment Repeaters Bridges (DSU/CSU) Routers Hubs / Switches Interface Cards (NIC)

17 Connectivity Services Switched Dedicated Packet –Modems –Frame Relay

18 Connectivity Bandwidth DDS Switched Phone Networks 56K T1 T3 OC3 OC12 OC192 ATM ISDN xDSL Cable Modems

19 LAN "A data communications system allowing a number of independent devices to communicate directly with each other, within a moderately sized geographic area over a physical communications channel of moderate data rates." IEEE

20 Topology Bus - Ethernet Token Ring Star

21 Protocols TCP/IP IPX Netbui SNMP (Management protocol) Appletalk X.25 Z39.50 IPNG??

22 Why LANs Need to share data, software, and hardware Centralized management Share access to outside sources

23 Future To distribute expertise not just files Remote offices have leadership and expertise - Videoconferencing Teleworkers need to be part of the structure

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25 AcronymFull NameDownstreamUpstreamMaximum Distance (C.O./user) IDSL Integrated DSL 128 Kbps 18,000 ft HDSL High Data Rate DSL 1.544Mbps 12,000 ft SDSL Symmetric DSL 1.544Mbps 10,000 ft ADSL Asymmetric DSL 8Mbps1Mbps12,000 ft RADSL Rate Adapter ADSL 7Mbps1Mbps18,000 ft VDSLVery High Rate DSL 51.84Mbps2.3Mbps1,000 ft

26 Lawrence Livermore Lab


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