CHAPTER ONE - College of Business
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Transcript CHAPTER ONE - College of Business
CHAPTER SEVEN
Networks, Telecommunications, and Mobile
Technology
The Telecommunications Revolution
It began with the deregulation of AT&T in 1986
AT&T sold long distance
7 baby bells were formed
Since then, there has been much M & A activity
At this point, it was all POTS
Sprint was formed and sold long distance
MCI was formed and sold long distance
Natural gas pipeline companies and others selling
bandwidth
Cable TV is not just for television anymore
VOIP (Vonage, Skype and others)
Trends and Focus Items
From proprietary networks to open
systems
TCP/IP
XML
From analog signals to digital
signals
From copper wires to fiber
Wireless, wireless, wireless
There are different wireless standards
Key Terms (1)
Telecommunication system enable the transmission of data
over public or private networks
Network - a communications, data
exchange, and resource-sharing
system created by linking two or
more computers and establishing
standards, or protocols, so that they
can work together
Key Terms (2)
Local area network (LAN) - is designed
to connect a group of computers in close
proximity to each other such as in an office
building, a school, or a home.
Wide area network (WAN) - spans a
large geographic area, such as a state,
province, or country
Metropolitan area network (MAN) - a
large computer network usually spanning a
city
Key Terms (3)
Virtual private network (VPN) a way to use the public
telecommunication infrastructure
(e.g., Internet) to provide secure
access to an organization’s network
Valued-added network (VAN) - a
private network, provided by a third
party, for exchanging information
through a high capacity connection
The Internet Revolution
The Internet changes everything
(Jeff Bezos – Amazon.com)
The Internet changes nothing (Len
Bosac - Cisco)
Metcalfe’s Law
The usefulness of a network equals
the square of the number of users
2,300,000,000(2,300,000,000 – 1)
Using the Net for a Competitive
Advantage
Voice over IP (VOIP)
Networking business
Increasing the speed of business
Optimizing business efficiency
Voice Over IP
Skype was one of the first
Vonage
AT&T and Cable providers
Cisco
Many companies use VOIP to
reduce telephony charges
Voice Over IP (Illustration)
Increasing the Speed of Business
Bandwidth - is the difference
between the highest and the lowest
frequencies that can be transmitted
on a single medium, and it is a
measure of the medium's capacity
Types of Channels
Physical
Twisted pair 2MB to 100MB
Coax (Ethernet) 200MB to 500mb
Fiber 320+ GB
Wireless
Microwave 200MB
Satellite 200+MB
Bluetooth (1MB)
Network Security
Encryption
Dedicated (leased) lines
VPN
Mobility (Terms)
Mobile means the technology can
travel with the user, but it is not
necessarily in real-time
Hand-held devices that dock when the
user returns to the office
Wireless gives users a live
(Internet) connection via satellite or
radio transmitters
Mobility (Examples)
FedEx and UPS hand-held devices
(real-time wireless connections)
Budweiser (Hand-held devices with
docking stations)
Season pass scanners
Cell Phones and PDAs
In 10 years, the PC might be
obsolete
Blackberries have permeated
business
The iPhone
A 25 billion dollar industry in apps
Bandwidth allows for the
convergence of voice, video, and
data
Cellular Service (Illustration)
The Cellular Revolution
Satellite Technologies
They use microwaves
Terrestrial microwaves
Geosynchronous satellites
Require line of sight
Good for remote locations
Slow upload speeds
Iridium http://www.iridium.com/
Global Positioning Systems
24 satellites transmit constantly
Your GPS receives these signals and
triangulates your position
GPS Illustration
Geographical Information Systems
(Introduction)
GIS integrates:
Spatial database
Query engine
Rendering and mapping engine
Use with GPS
Demo at
http://www.esri.com/software/arcgi
s/arcinfo/about/demos.html
WiMAX
Wide area wi-fi
Sprint, AT&T, Google
WiMAX cells can cover up to 3000
square miles
RFID
This is a hot topic
My Heavenly ski pass has an RFID
tag
Retailers used RFID in certain items
for loss prevention
Use on shipping containers
Wal-Mart uses RFID on all palletized
shipments
Wynn uses them in it’s casino chips
RFID (Privacy Concerns)
Imagine what I could learn with an
RFID tag embedded into your credit
card
RFID (Types)
Active tags have their own power
source
Passive tags get power from the
RFID reader
Mobile Workforce Trends
Social networking gets mobilized
Mobile TV
Multi-function devices become cheaper and
more versatile
Location-based services
Mobile advertising
Wireless providers move into home
entertainment
Wireless security moves to the forefront
Enterprise mobility