Networking technologies

Vicente González Ruiz

December 15, 2014

Contents

1 Definitions
2 Telephone (Dial-Up) Access [3]
3 Cable [3]
4 Satellite [1]
5 DSL (Digital Subscriber Line) [1]
6 WiFi (Wireless Fidelity) [4]
7 Bluetooth (IEEE 802.15.1) [4]
8 ZigBee (IEEE 802.15.4) [4]
9 Cellular [1]
10 IEEE 802.3 Ethernet [1]
11 Frame Relay [1]
12 ATM (Asynchronous Transfer Mode) [1]
13 Technologies summary

1 Definitions

A WAN is a datacommunications network that operates beyond the geographic scope of a LAN. WANs use the services of carriers, such as telephone companies, cable companies, satellite systems, and network providers.

When you build a WAN, regardless of the transport you choose, there is always a minimum of three basic components, or groups of components, connecting any two sites. Each site needs its own equipment (DTE) to access the telephone company’s CO serving the area (DCE). The third component sits in the middle, joining the two access points (for example, a Frame Relay backbone).

2 Telephone (Dial-Up) Access [3]

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Connection Modulation Bit-rate [kbps] Year released




110 baud Bell 101 modem FSK 0.1 1958
300 baud (Bell 103 or V.21) FSK 0.3 1962
1200 modem (1200 baud) (Bell 202) FSK 1.2  
1200 Modem (600 baud) (Bell 212A or V.22) QPSK 1.2 1980
2400 Modem (600 baud) (V.22bis) QAM 2.4 1984
2400 Modem (1200 baud) (V.26bis) PSK 2.4  
4800 Modem (1600 baud) (V.27ter) PSK 4.8  
9600 Modem (2400 baud) (V.32) QAM 9.6 1984
14.4k Modem (2400 baud) (V.32bis) TCM 14.4 1991
28.8k Modem (3200 baud) (V.34) TCM 28.8 1994
33.6k Modem (3429 baud) (V.34) TCM 33.6 1996
56k Modem (8000/3429 baud) (V.90) PCM 56.0/33.6 1998
56k Modem (8000/8000 baud) (V.92) PCM 56.0/48.0 2000

3 Cable [3]

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4 Satellite [1]

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5 DSL (Digital Subscriber Line) [1]

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6 WiFi (Wireless Fidelity) [4]

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Number of non-overpping chahhels.
Standard Frequency band #Channels Modulation Bit-rate





802.11a 5.1 GHz - 5.8 GHz Up to 3 OFDM Up to 54 Mbps
802.11b 2.4 GHz - 2.485 GHz 3 DSSS Up to 11 Mbps
802.11g 2.4 GHz - 2.485 GHz 3 OFDM Up to 54 Mbps
802.11n 2.4 GHz - 2.485 GHz ? MIMO-OFDM Up to 200 Mbps





7 Bluetooth (IEEE 802.15.1) [4]

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8 ZigBee (IEEE 802.15.4) [4]

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9 Cellular [1]

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10 IEEE 802.3 Ethernet [1]

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11 Frame Relay [1]

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12 ATM (Asynchronous Transfer Mode) [1]

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13 Technologies summary

Line type Bandwidth Capacity Modulation Voice Channels





Telephone [300,4300] up to 56 Kbps - 1
DS0 - 64 Kbps - 1
T1/DS1 - 1.544 Mbps AMI or B8ZA 24
E1 - 2.048 Mbps - 32
J1 - 2.048 Mbps - 32
T1C - 3.152 Mbps - 2*T1
T2/DS2 - 6.312 Mbps - 2*T1C
E3 - 34.064 Mbps - -
T3 - 44.736 Mbps - 7*T2
OC-1 - 51.84 Mbps - -
OC-3 - 155.54 Mbps - -
OC-9 - 466.56 Mbps - -
OC-12 - 622.08 Mbps - -
OC-18 - 933.12 Mbps - -
OC-24 - 1244.16 Mbps - -
OC-36 - 1866.24 Mbps - -
OC-48 - 2488.32 Mbps - -
OC-96 - 4976.64 Mbps - -
OC-192 - 9953.28 Mbps - -
OC-768 - 39813.12 Mbps - -
DS3 - 44.736 Mbps - 672
T4 - 274 Mbps - 6*T3





References

[1]   Behrouz Forouzan. Data Communications and Networking, 4th Edition. McGraw-Hill, 2007.

[2]   James F. Kurose and Keith W. Ross. Computer Networking: A Top-Down Approach Featuring the Internet (2nd Edition). Addison Wesley, 2003.

[3]   James F. Kurose and Keith W. Ross. Computer Networking: A Top-Down Approach Featuring the Internet (3rd Edition). Addison Wesley, 2005. http://www.cp.eng.chula.ac.th/~fyta/663/Curose-Ross%20-%20Computer_Networking_-_A_Top-down_Approach_Featuring_the_Internet__Third_Edition.pdf.

[4]   James F. Kurose and Keith W. Ross. Computer Networking: A Top-Down Approach Featuring the Interne, 6th Edition. Addison Wesley, 2013.