Wednesday, November 13, 2019
Modems :: essays research papers
 Modems           Modems are used to connect two computers over a phone line. Modem is  short for Modulator Demodulator. It's a device that converts data from digital  computer signals to analog signals that can be sent over a phone line. This is  called modulation. The analog signals are then converted back into digital data  by the receiving modem. This is called demodulation. A modem is fed digital  information, in the form of ones and zeros, from the CPU. The modem then  analyzes this information and converts it to analog signals, that can be sent  over a phone line. Another modem then receives these signals, converts them back  into digital data, and sends the data to the receiving CPU. At connection time,  modems send tones to each other to negotiate the fastest mutually supported  modulation method that will work over whatever quality line has been established  for that call. There are two main differences in the types of modems for PC,  internal and external modems.    Evolution of Modems         In the last 10 years, modem users have gone from data transfer rates of  300bps to 1,200 bps to 2,400 bps to 9,600 bps to 14.4Kbps to 28.8Kbps to, and to  33.6Kbps. Now new modem standards are emerging, reaching speeds of up to  56Kbps. Unlike the 33.6Kbps modems being sold today, 56Kbps is a significant  improvement over 28.8Kbps modems. Viewing complex graphics or downloading sound  files improves significantly with 56Kbps. The modem experts keep telling us that  we are about maxed out. For instance when the 28.8 modems where first introduced  they said that we've reached our maximum speed, and the same thing was said  about the 33.6 and now again for the 56K, but how true is this? The experts say  that the next major improvement will have to come from the telephone companies,  when they start laying down fibber-optic cables so we can have integrated  services digital network (ISDN) . The thing that makes digital modems better  than analog is because with analog modem transmission errors are very frequent  which results in your modem freezing or just freaking out. These errors are  caused mainly by some kind of noise on the line due to lightning storms,  sunspots, and other fascinating electromagnetic phenomena, noise occurs anywhere  on the line between your PC and the computer you're communicating with 2,000  miles away. Even if line noise is minimal, most modems will automatically reduce  it's speed to avoid introducing data errors.    Baud vs bps         While taking about modems, the transmission speed is the source of a lot  of confusion. The root of the problem is the fact that the terms "baud" and    					    
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.