Industrial Data Communications 4th Edition

Chapter 4 - Local Area Networks (LANs)

How We Got Here


Thus far, we have looked at some communication models and some of the prevalent serial

communications standards. In the natural progression from standalone to networked

systems we now come to a fork in the road. Originally, all data communications were point

to point, much as airplane travel was before the advent of the airport as a hub. There were

established networks-telegraph, teletypewriter, telephone, television, railroads, interstate

highways-but most data communications was performed over a point-to-point link. Even

if those links were made into a network they didn't have a shared medium of transmission.


The need for expensive resources created the need for shared resources. Since bandwidth

was (and is) expensive, high-bandwidth lines would have to be shared by many. Printers and

mass storage were likewise quite expensive. Facing similar pressure for the use of expensive

resources, airlines found that by feeding into a hub and then transporting passengers from

hub to hub they could achieve much greater efficiency and reduce shared costs for the passenger

and the airline. However, bad things can happen-weather, mechanical problems,

and delays by air traffic control-and the efficiency starts to drop off into chaos. In data

communications the use of trunks with store and forward switches (the same concept used

by railroads and telephone companies) evolved into the wide area data networks.


The aforementioned fork in the road comes at this point: do we want to network locally (as

in a plant or office area) or do we need to go through the public network? Do we want to

create a local area network or a wide area network? In this unit we discuss the basics of

local area networks.

UNLIMITED FREE
ACCESS
TO THE WORLD'S BEST IDEAS

SUBMIT
Already a GlobalSpec user? Log in.

This is embarrasing...

An error occurred while processing the form. Please try again in a few minutes.

Customize Your GlobalSpec Experience

Category: Network Design and Development Services
Finish!
Privacy Policy

This is embarrasing...

An error occurred while processing the form. Please try again in a few minutes.