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Chapter 4. Business Telecommunications. The Internetworked Enterprise. The Internet and Internetworked technology based networks (intranets and extranets) have become the primary IT infrastructure
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Chapter 4 Business Telecommunications
The InternetworkedEnterprise • The Internet and Internetworked technology based networks (intranets and extranets) have become the primary IT infrastructure • Allows for managers, end users, workgroups, project teams to communicate, share work, and exchange data and information
The InternetworkedEnterprise cont. • Most organizations could not survive or compete without advanced computer networks
Telecommunications • Defined as the exchange of information in any form over a computer-based network • There are three major categories of telecommunications applications each relying on Internet based networks
Telecommunications • Enterprise collaboration - Applications using telecom networks to support communication, coordination, and collaboration among business teams and workgroups • Electronic Commerce - Applications that support trade over the Internet
Telecommunications • Internal Business - Telecommunications that support a variety of company operations
Business Value of Telecommunications • Advanced telecommunications aid in overcoming barriers to business success • geographic barriers • time barriers • cost barriers • structural barriers
Management Focus • Managers need to have an awareness of major trends in telecommunications • Services and networks are available from many vendors • Internet and the World Wide Web have created new products, services, and providers
Management cont • Businesses have increased their uses of the Internet and Web for e-commerce and enterprise collaboration
Technology Trends • Open systems that use Internet technology are the driving force behind business communications • Movement towards client/server networks • Open systems are defined as information systems that use common elements such as transmission protocol
Technology Trends • Connectivity is the ability of computer networks to communicate and share information • Changing from analog to digital network technologies • Digital offers advantages
Digital Advantages • Higher transmission speeds • Can transport larger blocks of data • Economic • Lower error rates (very important) • Can transmit multiple types of communications over same line
Communications Media • Moving towards fiber optic and satellite communications • These mediums allow for lower installation labor and reduced physical size • Greater capacity • Faster transmission speeds • Freedom from electrical interference
TelecomApplication Trends • There are many, many telecommunications applications enabled by the Internet, WWW, intranets and extranets • Telecom networks are an essential component of business • Telecom lowers costs and shortens business lead and response times
Telecom Trends cont • Support electronic commerce • Enable workgroup collaboration • Develop online processes • Share resources • Enable new product and service development
The Internet Revolution • The largest network in the world • No central location • Network of networks • Unique addresses (IP addresses) • Growing rapidly
Internet Applications • E-Mail • Browsing or surfing • Newsgroup participation • Browser software opens information doors • Companies use websites to launch e-business solutions • Download capability for app software
Business Uses of the Internet • Strategic uses of the Internet • Business partner collaboration • Provide for customer and vendor support • Buy and sell over the ‘net • Marketing, sales, and service applications • E-commerce • Enterprise communications
Enterprise Communicationand Collaboration • Internet, intranet, extranets support global communications and collaboration among employees, customers, vendors, and any other business partners • Interactive web sites, e-mail, BBS, videoconferencing
Electronic Commerce • Trade conducted over the Internet • Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) is the transfer of document based data and information over Internet • Electronic Funds Transfer (EFT) is the transfer of payments over secure networks
Business Objectivesfor the Internet • Attract new customers • Improve service for existing customers • Develop web-based markets and distribution channels for existing products • Develop new information based products that are easily accessible on the Web
Communications Network • A communications network requires several elements • Terminals - Can be phones, computers, transaction terminals, etc • Telecom processors - Modems, switches, routers • Media - Physical connection, copper wire, coax cable, fiber optic, rf, infrared, satellite
Computers and ControlSoftware • Host computers (mainframes) • Front-end processors (minicomputers) • Network servers (microcomputers) • Telecom monitor software (mainframes) • Network operating systems (network servers) • Communications applications (micros)
Network Configurations • Wide Area Network (WAN) • Local Area Network (LAN) • Interconnected (Internet, Intranet, Extranet) • Client/Server • VPN (virtual private network)
WANs • Cover large geographic areas such as cities, countries, continents, etc • Cable, fiber optics are primary mediums
LANs • Closer proximity than WAN • Offices, schools, manufacturing • Use twisted pair wire, coax cable, radio frequency, infrared • Require NIC (network interface card) • Most popular configuration is network server with network operating system installed
Internetworks • Rely on Internet technology • Intranet - Secure network using Internet technology • Extranet - External network linking business partners, auxillary offices using • Client/Server - End user stations are clients • Rely on central Server
Network Computing • Browser based network • Network computers have no disk drives • Reliant on powerful servers that contain operating system, applications, databases, and applets
TelecommunicationsChannels • Many forms of media • twisted pair wire - ordinary telephone wire • coax cable - cable television • Cellular networks • Infrared • Radio frequency
Twisted Pair • Advantages are low cost, ease of use, readily available • Disadvantages are high levels of interference, must use repeaters that amplify signal, low security
Coaxial Cable • Advantages are low cost, easy to run, can be bundled, laid underground, high transmission rates • Disadvantages - more expensive than twisted pair
Fiber Optic • Low cost (relative) • High transmission rates • Light weight • Low noise interference • Can be run undersea • High security • Disadvantages - Difficult to install, hard to repair
Cellular • Cellular grids • Low cost to users • Not secure • Can be secured with encryption (fairly expensive)
RF and Infrared • Easy to set up • Easy to maintain • Fairly expensive (but declining prices) • Limited to close distances
Telecom Devices • Modems convert analog to digital back to analog • Multiplexers allow single channel to be split into multiple channels • Switches, routers direct traffic on network • Hub allows for multiple connections to single server • Gateway allows connection of differing topologies
Three Types of NetworkTopology • Star • Ring • Bus
Star • All terminals linked to a central computer • This computer directs traffic among terminals • Susceptible to downtime • High cost
Ring • Terminals tied together in a loop • Often used to link mainframes • More reliable and less costly
Bus • Centralized cable that each terminal connects to • Does not require a host • Often used to connect small group of microcomputers