Wednesday, November 25, 2009

Modem




A modem is used to translate information transferred through telephone lines, cable or line-of-site wireless. The term stands for modulate and demodulate which changes the signal from digital, which computers use, to analog, which telephones use and then back again. Digital modems transfer digital information directly without changing to analog.Modems are measured by the speed that the information is transferred. The measuring tool is called the baud rate.
Originally modems worked at speeds below 2400 baud but today analog speeds of 56,000 are standard. Cable, wireless or digital subscriber lines can transfer information much faster with rates of 300,000 baud and up.Modems also use Error Correction which corrects for transmission errors by constantly checking whether the information was received properly or not and Compression which allows for faster data transfer rates. Information is transferred in packets. Each packet is checked for errors and is re-sent if there is an error.Anyone who has used the Internet has noticed that at times the information travels at different speeds.
Depending on the amount of information that is being transferred, the information will arrive at it's destination at different times. The amount of information that can travel through a line is limited. This limit is called bandwidth.There are many more variables involved in communication technology using computers, much of which is covered in the section on the Internet.

Seja o primeiro a comentar

Post a Comment