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Physical Media

Media -- Provides the electro-mechanical interface through which data moves among devices on the network.
Bounded media transmit signals by sending electricity or light over a cable. Simply put, media is the wire, or anything that takes the place of the wire, such as fiber optic, infrared, or radio spectrum technology.

Public Switched Telephone Network (PSTN), often referred to as Plain Old Telephone Service (POTS),
- connections run over the standard copper phone lines found in most homes
- The FCC has limited the speed of analog transmissions to 53 Kbps

Modem - a device that allows one computer to communicate with another computer over a standard telephone line by modulating a digital signal into an analog signal that can travel through phone lines.

Constructed from the words modulator and demodulator, it is a device that modulates a carrier signal to encode digital information, and also demodulates such a carrier signal to decode the transmitted information. The goal is to produce a signal that can be transmitted easily and decoded to reproduce the original digital data.

Modem standards, or V dot modem standards, are defined by the ITU (International Telecommunications Union).

Integrated Services Digital Network (ISDN) uses a single wire or fiber optic line to carry voice, data, and video signals.

Basic Rate Interface (BRI) is most commonly used in residential ISDN connections. It's composed of two bearer (B) channels at 64 Kbps each for a total of 128 Kbps (used for voice and data) and one delta (D) channel at
16 Kbps (used for controlling the B channels and signal transmission). The total bandwidth is up to 144 Kbps.

Primary Rate Interface (PRI) is most commonly used between a PBX (Private Branch Exchange) at the customer's site and the central office of the phone company. It is composed of 23 B channels at 64 Kbps and one D channel at 64 Kbps. The total bandwidth is up to 1,536 Kbps.

Digital Subscriber Line (DSL) - technologies use existing, regular copper phone lines to transmit data. DSL hardware can transmit data using three channels over the same wire. In a typical set up, a user connected through a DSL hookup can send data at 640 Kbps, receive data at 1.5 Mbps, and still carry on a standard phone conversion over one line.

Cable Connection - access to the Internet through the same coaxial cable that brings cable TV into your home. A signal splitter installed by the cable company isolates the Internet signals from the TV signals. The two-way cable connection is always available and can be very fast. Speeds up to 30 Mbps are claimed to be possible, although speeds in the 1 to 2 Mbps range are more typical.

T-Carrier Technology is a digital transmission service used to create point-to-point private networks and to establish direct connections to Internet Service Providers. It uses four wires, one pair to transmit and another to receive.

T-1 lines support data transfer at rates of 1.544 megabits per second. Each T-1 line contains 24 channels.

The E1 line is the European counterpart that transmits data at 2.048 Mbps.

T-3, has 672 (64 Kbps) channels, for a total data rate of 44.736 Mbps.

The E3 line is the European counterpart that transmits data at 34.368 Mbps.

Twisted pair cabling is a common form of wiring in which two conductors are wound around each other for the purposes of canceling out electromagnetic interference which can cause crosstalk. The number of twists per meter make up part of the specification for a given type of cable.

The two major types of twisted-pair cabling are unshielded twisted-pair (UTP) and shielded twisted-pair (STP).

UTP - Unshielded Twisted Pair; uses RJ-45, RJ-11, RS-232, and RS-449 connectors, max length is 100 meters, speed is up to 100Mps. Cheap, easy to install, length becomes a problem. Can be CAT 2,3,4 or 5 quality grades.

STP - In STP, the inner wires are encased in a sheath of foil or braided wire mesh. Shielded Twisted Pair uses RJ-45, RJ-11, RS-232, and RS-449 connectors, max length is 100 meters, speed is up to 500Mps. Not as inexpensive as UTP, easy to install, length becomes a problem. Can be CAT 2,3,4 or 5 quality grades.

Category 1 Traditional UTP telephone cable. Category 1 can transmit voice signals but not data. Most telephone cable installed prior to 1983 is Category 1.

Category 2 UTP cable made up of four twisted-pair wires, certified for transmitting data up to 4 Mbps (megabits per second).

Category 3 UTP cable made up of four twisted-pair wires, each twisted three times per foot. Category 3 is certified to transmit data up to 10 Mbps.

Category 4 UTP cable made up of four twisted-pair wires, certified to transmit data up to 16 Mbps.

Category 5 UTP cable made up of four twisted-pair wires, certified to transmit data up to 100 Mbps.

Fiber optic - (IEEE 802.8) Cable in which the center core, a glass cladding composed of varying layers of reflective glass, refracts light back into the core. Max length is 25 kilometers, speed is up to 2Gbps but very expensive. Best used for a backbone due to cost.

Twisted-pair Ethernet cable has the following specifications:
a maximum of 1,024 attached workstations;
a maximum of 4 repeaters between communicating workstations; and
a maximum segment length of 328 feet (100 meters).

Fast Ethernet Physical Specifications

100BASE-TX specification uses two pairs of Category 5 UTP or Category 1 STP cabling at a 100 Mbps data transmission speed. Each segment can be up to 100 meters long.

100BASE-T4 specification uses four pairs of Category 3, 4, or 5 UTP cabling at a 100 Mbps data transmission speed with standard RJ-45 connectors. Each segment can be up to 100 meters long.

100BASE-FX specification uses two-strand 62.5/125 micron multi- or single-mode fiber media. Half-duplex, multi-mode fiber media has a maximum segment length of 412 meters. Full-duplex, single-mode fiber media has a maximum segment length of 10,000 meters.

Two techniques can be used to transmit signals over the data transmission media. A baseband transmission line provides only one channel per line, while a broadband transmission line provides multiple communication channels.

Baseband systems use digital encoding techniques to carry digital data over a digital transmission line. In baseband transmission, all of the available frequencies in the transmission medium are used by one signal.

Broadband systems use modulation techniques to transmit digital data over analog carrier waves. Broadband transmission lines can be much longer than baseband lines.

coaxial cable: (coax) - commonly used for thick ethernet, thin ethernet, cable TV and ARCnet, coaxial cabling that uses BNC connectors; heavy shielding protects data, but expensive and hard to make connectors

10BASE5, also called Thicknet or Thick Ethernet, uses thick, coaxial cable.
Thick coax cable (RG-6) requires the following:

a 50-ohm terminator on each end of the cable;
a maximum of 3 segments with attached devices (populated segments);
a network board using the external transceiver;
a maximum of 100 devices on a segment, including repeaters;
a maximum length of 1,640 feet (500 meters) per segment;
a maximum of 4,920 feet (1500 meters) per segment trunk;
one ground per segment;
a maximum of 16 feet (5 meters) between a tap and its device; and
a minimum of 8 feet (2.5 meters) between taps.

10BASE2 uses thin Ethernet cable.
Thin coax cable, or Thin Ethernet, implemented with T-connectors and terminators, such as RG-58 and A/U or C/U, have the following specifications:

a 50-ohm terminator on each end of the cable;
a maximum length of 1,000 feet (185 meters) per segment;
a maximum of 30 devices per segment;
a network board using the internal transceiver;
a maximum of 3 segments with attached devices (populated segments);
one ground per segment;
a minimum of 1.5 feet (.5 meters) between T-connectors;
a maximum of 1,818 feet (555 meters) per trunk segment; and
a maximum of 30 connections per segment.

A British Naval Connector (BNC)- a.k.a. Bayonet Nut Connector - a.k.a. Bayonet Neill-Concelman (the inventors of the BNC connector) is usually used for thinnet coaxial cable. A terminator is a resistor attached to the end of the cable. Its purpose is to prevent signal reflections, effectively making the cable "look" infinitely long to the signals being sent across it.

Unbounded media transmits data without the benefit of a conduit-it might transmit data through open air, water, or even a vacuum.

Narrow band radio, laser, and microwave - transmission can not occur through steel or load bearing walls.

Satellite - Has a transmission delay of 240 to 300 milliseconds

Terrestrial microwave - Commonly used for long distance voice and video transmissions, and for short distance high speed links between buildings.

Laser - Resistant to eavesdropping and capable of high transmission rates; susceptible to attenuation and interference.

Spread spectrum radio - frequencies are divided into channel or hops.


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