Industrial Data Communications 4th Edition

Chapter 1 - Communication Concepts

This chapter deals with the fundamentals of data communications. We primarily probe and
discuss the factors that affect all communications from a "big picture" perspective, so that
when the details are presented in later chapters, you will know which niche is being filled
in. A portion of the chapter-the discussion of low-level data organization sometimes
called a "coding" (referring to ASCII and EBCDIC)-is almost a technical history in itself
(more on this subject is provided in appendix B).

Goals

Communication has certain goals. In all communications there must be a source (typically
called the transmitter) and one or more destinations (typically called receivers). The goal is to
go from one end user (the source) to the other end user or users (the destination). This transmitting
is done through a medium of one kind or another, varying according to the
technology used. Audio communications use the air as a medium. In data communications
we use conductors (usually referred to as "copper" connections), light pipes (referred to as
fiber-optic cabling), and electromagnetic transmission (usually referred to as wireless or radio).

Basically, this book is all about how we organize and move data. Data itself is useless until
organized, at which time it becomes information. We organize communication processes in
three basic ways: point-to-point, multi-drop, or networked. Figure 1-1 illustrates these three
organizations. Note that while these terms are couched in technical symbology, the concepts
behind them are relatively easy. Point-to-point means just that, from one point to
another, or from one end user to another directly. Multi-drop is closer to a network than to
point-to-point. Generally, multi-drop involves a master of some kind with slave stations, not
peers. It should be understood that by most definitions of a network, a multi-drop system
is a network. Finally, a network is simply three or more stations connected by a common
media, by which they may share information. Later in this book we will tighten our definition,
dividing networks into wide area or local, and so on. But for now, where three or
more stations are connected we will consider them a network.

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