"Hugo Cornwall "The Hacker's handbook"" - читать интересную книгу автораBell 103 ans 300(*) full 2025 2225 1070 1270 2225
Bell 202 1200 half 2200 1200 2200 1200 2025 (*)any speed up to 300 baud, can also include 75 and 110 baud services (**)service can either be half-duplex at 1200 baud or asymmetrical full duplex, with 75 baud originate and 1200 baud receive (commonly used as viewdata user) or 1200 transmit and 75 receive (viewdata host) Higher Speeds 1200 baud is usually regarded as the fastest speed possible on an ordinary voice-grade telephone line. Beyond this, noise on the line due to the switching circuits at the various telephone exchanges, poor cabling, etc. make accurate transmission difficult. Indeed, at higher speeds it becomes increasingly important to use transmission protocols that include error correction. Error correction techniques usually consist of dividing the transmission stream into a series of blocks which can be checked, one above is one example, but obviously a crude one. The difficulty is that the more secure an error-correction protocol becomes, the greater becomes the overhead in terms of numbers of bits transmitted to send just one character from one computer to another. Thus, in the typical 300 bit situation, the actual letter is defined by 7 bits, 'start' and 'stop' account for another two, and the check takes a further one--ten in all. After a while, what you gain in the speed with which each actual bit is transmitted, you lose, because so many bits have to be sent to ensure that a single character is accurately received! Although some people risk using 2400 baud on ordinary telephone lines--the jargon is the PTSN (Public Telephone Switched Network)--this means using expensive modems. Where higher speeds are essential, leased circuits, not available via dial-up. become essential. The leased circuit is paid for on a fixed charge, not a charge based on time-connected. Such circuits can be conditioned', for example by using special amplifiers, to support the higher data rate. For really high speed transmissions, however, pairs of copper cable are inadequate. Medium speed is obtainable by the use of coaxial cable (a little like that used for tv antenna hook-ups) which have a very broad bandwidth. Imposing several different channels on one cable-length is called multiplexing and, depending on the application, the various channels can either carry several different |
|
|