Network Technologies: Internet Technologies and Applications
Network Technologies: Internet Technologies and Applications
Network Technologies: Internet Technologies and Applications
• Contents:
– Categorizing Networks: geography, users, medium, mobility
– Wired Networks
– Wireless Networks
Access
Network
Access Core
Network Network
Core
Network
Access
Network
Access Core Network
Network (or Backbone/Transport Network)
Access
Access
Network
Core Network
Network Core
Network
Access
Network Access
Network
ITS 413 - Network Technologies 4
Categorizing Networks
• Based on users:
– Access networks require capacity to support
• Traffic between users within the same access network
• Traffic from users in one access network to another
– Core networks require capacity to support
• Traffic between multiple access networks
– Not all users send the same amount of data at the same time,
• In access networks, the amount of traffic sent over time varies significantly;
hence difficult to take advantage of statistical multiplexing
• In core networks, the average traffic sent over time is stable; can take
advantage of statistical multiplexing
– Access networks are generally higher speed than core networks (for
same cost)
– Wireless
• Allows mobility
• Allows convenience
• Wireless
– IEEE 802.11 Wireless LAN family
– Bluetooth (and other short range wireless)
Chiang Mai
Local
UTP
Exchange
telephone 600 voice
line circuits
60 voice
3600 voice circuits
circuits
UTP
telephone
line
ITS 413 - Network Technologies 13
PSTN
Users
Local
Telephone
Exchanges
City Telephone
Exchange
Traffic from 1
user
Modem
Chiang Mai
Local
UTP
Exchange
telephone 600 voice
line circuits
Internet Service
Provider The Internet
(ISP)
15
Dial Up Server
Digital Subscriber Line
• Copper line can actually transmit about 1MHz spectrum
– DSL technologies make use of most of this 1MHz (except the 4kHz for
voice)
– Digital signals are sent from home (modem) to exchange (multiplexer)
– Different types of standards
Exchange/Central Office
Customer Premises (e.g. house) Internet
ISP Network
ADSL Multiplexer
(e.g. DSLAM)
Public Switched
Telephone Network
– Key Features:
• Makes use of widely installed telephone network
• Supports basic voice and video applications
• Key features:
– Generally faster than ADSL, although shared medium
– Can avoid paying for telephone line (if use Voice over IP)
• Key features:
– Allow much higher data rates than copper and coaxial cable
– Support data (Internet), voice and video (e.g. digital TV)
– Requires installation of optical fibre
• IP Networks
• Wireless Networks
– Point-to-point microwave, satellite
PDH is used to connected between sites and usually leased (rented) from a
telecommunications company on a monthly basis. For example, if CAT had a copper
cabling between Bangkadi and Rangsit, SIIT could lease a PDH circuit, such as E1 at
2Mb/s.
Example: this may be a network owned and operated by an ISP. SIIT pays
the ISP to carry traffic to other networks (e.g. Rangsit, other Uni’s, the
Internet)
ITS 413 - Network Technologies 30
Asynchronous Transfer Mode
• In 1980’s, as Internet grew, people wanted faster methods than IP datagram
switching (and routing)
– Routers performing forwarding/routing in software were slow for large networks
• Developed ATM, with the intention that it could be used as a fast WAN and
LAN technology
– Virtual circuit based packet switching
• Use fixed size (53 byte) packets, or ATM cells: 48 bytes of data and 5 bytes of header
– Better support for voice, video and data: Quality of Service control (wasn’t
available in IP at the time)
– Support data rates from 25Mbs up to 622Mb/s (now even faster)
• Current status:
– ATM WANs are today used by telecommunication companies to connect their
networks (e.g. within ISPs, across cities, between cities)
• In the future, may be replaced with IP over optical networks (SDH/SONET)
– ATM LANs were not successful: Ethernet is the dominant LAN standard
Transport
ATM
Data Link LAPB/HDLC LAPF
Received signal,
Power of the signal is lost power Pr
during transmission
Distance, d
Transmitter Receiver
– The amount of power lost between transmitter and receiver depends on:
• Distance, frequency, size of antenna, directionality of antenna, obstructions
– The encoding of bits (0’s and 1’s) into an analog signal, and decoding at receiver, determines
the data rate that can be used it particular environment
– A receiver can only successfully decode (“understand”) a signal received above a certain
power level
Transmission Range
Data Rate
Transmitter Frequency Receiver
– (and of course, cost: different technologies will have different costs) [Baht]
Signal
Transmitter Receiver
• Broadcast Radio (point-to-multipoint)
– Transmitter sends signal in every direction: omni-directional
– Anyone “within range” can receive the signal
Signal
Receiver
Transmitter
40
Short Range Wireless Communications
• Range: up to about 10 metres
• Examples: Bluetooth, IrDA (infrared), ZigBee and IEEE 802.15.4,
Ultra Wide Band (UWB)
• Applications: connect electronic devices together
– Wireless desktop: keyboard, mouse, PC, monitor connected without
cables
– Personal or Body Area Networks: devices carried with you (mobile
phone, PDA, camera, watch, headset) connected
– Automation: control and monitoring of devices (lights, machinery, A/C,
entertainment) in homes, offices, factories, hospitals, …
Technology Frequency Data Rate Power Range
PSTN
Gateway
Telephone
calls
PSTN
Network Operators Core
Network
Base Station
• Wireless technologies are typically lower data rates than similar cost
wired technologies
– WLAN (54Mb/s) vs Ethernet (100/1000Mb/s)
– EDGE (240kb/s) vs ADSL (1.5Mb/s)
– HSPA (~10Mb/s) vs Optical (100Mb/s)
– WiMax (35Mb/s) vs Optical (1000Mb/s)