I think i understand everything now lol
Modulated systems, such as cable internet and ADSL,
so cable internet stil uses phone line but just its range of frequencies (above the lower voice) is higher than ADSL and hence faster speeds?
i.e. say the medium TP supports 1oo-300Hz (hypothetical ofcourse)
- voice = 100-120Hz and
- ADSL: 120-200
- Cable: 120 - 300 (i.e. its range of frequencies is higher than ADSL and so can transmit more data signals.)
- does a different communication channel mean it sorta (analogy here we come) splits a road into different lanes...and so data could travel up one lane (channel) and down another at the same time i.e. although its just the one cable, as there are 2 communication channels in can do full duplex? or does dividing a medium into 2 different channels just mean it "divides the road" into two lanes but data can still only be sent in the one direction, just two different "cars - i.e. signals) can travel at once.
- is a segment just a collection of nodes all sending data on the same communication channel?
- if a hub is used it sends data along the same communication channel to all nodes and so they are all sharing the same channel and thus on the same segment. Hubs can only understand data sent within that communication channel so all nodes must send data within this channel. This is why on a physical star only one node can send data at the same time as if 2 nodes were to send data at the same time down the same channel this would cause collisions and muddling of the 2 signals in the channel. Nodes connected to a switch on a physical/logical star send data on different channels to eachother, so a switch can recieve their different signals at once and direct them. As all connected nodes use different communication channels they are on different segments. Example: nodeA operating on channelA needs to send data to nodeB operating on its channelB. nodeA's data is sent to the switch on channelA, where the switch sends it to nodeB along the channelA. This allows data to be sent and collisions non-existent as each node is sending data on its own frequency so no 2 nodes are operating the same frequency. Every node, however, can accept data along any channel. The ability of these multiple channels means data can also be send and recieved at the same time (data travelling to node is one a different channel to data that node is sending)
- Communication channels: communication channels are just subsets of the range of frequencies supported for that medium. Each different signal is modulated into its own range so it can be distinguished form the other data send along the other communication channels...i think that right.
- Modems: they basically are only needed when we need to split a physical communication medium into different communication channels. This is needed to be done when we have more than one device sharing the one medium? or maybe when the same device needs to send two different signals and the same time?
- "bridges split the LAN into a number of segments"...so does this mean all nodes in the segment operate on the same one communication channel.
- Hence why LANs dont need modems from node-node as they are only sending the one signal along the singlular communication channel.
Modems (or NIC? i thought NIC's controlled the sending of information :S) alter the voltage using Manchester encoding (synchronous transmission - preample to synchronise eachothers clocks so reciever checks voltage of signal at same time sender places signal on - the faster the sender places it on the faster the data speeds - the speed they place the signal on is dependant on the medium i.e. fibre optics allows for sender so place signal onto medium more often than TP as signals less affected by noise so less space needed between placings of bits)
so if thats right i shall be fine
i tried to keep this post short aha. I think i succeeded personally lol.
i just think i may as well ask because after 2 days i might regret not asking lol