Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 29
Lesson:
Data Communication Concepts
Data Communication and Network
Description of Data Communication
Communication can be defined as the exchange of
information between two or more bodies.
Data is referred to as a piece of information formatted
in a special way.
Strictly speaking, data is the plural of datum, a single
piece of information. In practice, however, people use data as both the singular and plural form of the word. Data Transmission Signal can be a voltage that is proportional to the amplitude of message. When these signals are transfer between two or more points we say data is transmitted. Data transmission always uses the form of electromagnetic waves and they are classified into guided electromagnetic waves and unguided electromagnetic waves. Examples of guided waves are twisted pair, coaxial cable and optical fiber. Unguided waves means transmitting electromagnetic waves but they are not guided as example propagation through air, vacuum and seawater. Analog and Digital Signal
Figure 1 illustrates an analog signal. The term analog signal
refers to signal that is continuous and takes continuous value.
Figure 1 illustrates an analog signal
Analog and Digital Signal
A digital signal is a physical signal that is a representation of a
sequence of discrete values. The signal must have a finite set of possible values, the number of set which can be anywhere between two and very large number that is not infinity.
Figure 2 Typical Digital Signal
Why Data Communication? • Data communication refers to the movement of encoded information from one point to another by means of electronic transmission system. It can also be defined as the exchange of data between two devices via some form of transmission medium which can be wired or wireless. Another definition for data communications simply mean the transferring of digital information (usually in binary form) between two or more points (terminals). Protocols and Standards
The fundamental purpose of data
communication is to exchange information which is done by following certain rules and regulations called protocols and standards. Components of Data Communication Basic Components of data communication are: Source: It is the transmitter of data. Examples are: Terminal, Computer, Mainframe etc. Medium: The communications stream through which the data is being transmitted. Examples are: Cabling, Microwave, Fiber optics, Radio Frequencies (RF), Infrared Wireless etc. Receiver: The receiver of the data transmitted. Examples are: Printer, Terminal, Mainframe, and Computer. Basic Block Diagram of a Data Communication System
It shows the basic block diagram of a typical data
communication system. This can further be broken down to three; the source system, transmission system and destination system. Source
The source generates the information or
data that will be transmitted to the destination. Popular forms of information include text, numbers, pictures, audio, video or a combination of any of these. Information are put together in analog or digital form and broken into group or segment of data called packets. Transmitter The transmitter a device used to convert the data as per the destination requirement. For example a modem, converts the analog (telephonic) signal to digital (computer) signals and alternatively digital to analog. Transmission medium The transmission medium is the physical path by which data travels from transmitter to receiver. Example of such channels is copper wires, optical fibers and wireless communication channels etc. Receiver This receives the signals from the transmission medium and converts it into a form that is suitable to the destination device. For example, a modem accepts analog signal from a transmission channel and transforms it into digital bit stream which is acceptable by computer system. Destination
It is simply a device for which source
device sends the data. Data Communication Criteria
correct destination. Data must be received by the intended device or user and only by that device or user. Accuracy
The system must deliver the data
accurately. Data that have been altered in transmission and left uncorrected are unusable. Timeliness
The system must deliver data in a timely
manner. Data delivered late are useless. Jitter
Jitter refers to the variation in the packet
arrival time. It is the uneven delay of delivery of audio or video packets. Data Communication And Terminal Equipment
Data Communication Equipment (DCE)
Data communication equipment (DCE) is the hardware
devices that can be used to establish, maintain and terminate communication between a data source and its destination. Data communications equipment is most used to perform signal exchange, coding and line clocking tasks as part of intermediate equipment or DTE. A typical example of data communication equipment is the modem. Data Communication And Terminal Equipment
Data Terminal Equipment (DTE)
Data terminal equipment (DTE) refers to the interface
equipment which is source or destination in communication. The terminal equipment is capable of converting information to signals and also reconverting received signals. Data terminal equipment does communicate directly with each other. Communication between them is done by data communication equipment. Data Communication And Terminal Equipment
Data communication and terminal equipment
Data Representation
Data representation is defined as the methods used to
represent information in computers. Different types of data can be stored in the computer system. This includes numeric data, text, executable files, images, audio, video, etc. all these will look different to us as human. However, all types of information or data stored in the computer are represented as a sequence of 0s and 1s. Decimal Numbers
As human we are used to writing numbers using digits
0 to 9. This is called base 10. This number system has been widely adopted, in large part because we have 10 fingers. However, other number systems still persist in modern society. Binary Numbers
Any positive integer (whole number) can be
represented by a sequence of 0s and 1s. Numbers in this form are said to be in base two, and are called binary numbers. Computers are based on the binary (base 2) number system because electrical wire can only be of two states (on or off). Hexadecimal Numbers
The hexadecimal (base 16) number system is often
used as shorthand for binary. Base 16 is useful because 16 is a power of 2, and numbers have roughly as many digits as in the corresponding decimal representation. Another name for hexadecimal numbers is alphadecimal because the numbers are written from 0 to 9 and A to F. where A is 10, B is 11 up to F that is 15. Text
American Standard Code for Information Interchange (ASCII
code) defines 128 different symbols. The symbols are all the characters found on a standard keyboard, plus a few extra. Unique numeric code (0 to 127) is assigned to each character. In ASCII, “A” is 65, “B” is 66, “a” is 97, “b” is 98, and so forth. When a file is save as “plain text”, it is stored using ASCII. ASCII format uses 1 byte per character 1 byte gives only 256 (128 standard and 128 non-standard) possible characters. The code value for any character can be converter to base 2, so any written message made up of ASCII characters can be converted to a string of 0s and 1s. Graphics
Graphics on computer screen are consists of pixels.
The pixels are tiny dots of color that collectively paint a graphic image on a computer screen. It is physical point in a raster image, or the smallest addressable element in an all points addressable display device. Thank You!!