Electrical Data Communications

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the best way to view data transmitted by a modem over a telephone line, debating whether to conceptualize it as changing voltage over time or as moving electrical signals. It emphasizes modeling the phone line as a transmission line, questioning if electrical signals propagate as waves or set voltage along the cable. Modulation techniques, including frequency and amplitude modulation, are highlighted as key aspects of how modem data is encoded. The conversation also suggests that understanding the phone connection in terms of current rather than voltage may provide a clearer perspective. Overall, there is acknowledgment of confusion surrounding the electrical details and the potential for incomplete explanations in networking theories.
ramollari
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What is the best way of viewing data sent by a modem through a telephone line: as a changing voltage in terms of time or as moving electrical signals? In my Networking course exchanged bits, bytes, and packets, are portrayed as waves (current changing with distance) that propagate through the wires.
 
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ramollari said:
What is the best way of viewing data sent by a modem through a telephone line: as a changing voltage in terms of time or as moving electrical signals? In my Networking course exchanged bits, bytes, and packets, are portrayed as waves (of changing current) that propagate through the wires.

You can do either one. I assume the intent is to model the phone line as a transmission line.
 
Well, are the electrical signals 'waves'? Do they propagate from one point to another in a long cable or set the voltage throughout its length?
 
ramollari said:
Well, are the electrical signals 'waves'? Do they propagate from one point to another in a long cable or set the voltage throughout its length?
Modem data is encoded on a carrier. The modulation is both in frequency and amplitude. Old modems just used frequency modulation.

As far as your phone connection being a "long" cable, most likely not.
Often it is digitized then reassembled near the destination.

Also it is probably better to think of a phone connection in terms of current rather than voltage.
 
Yeah now I have a better view of how it works. But I've been confused a lot about the electrical details and I bet that most theorists on computer networking provide contradictory or incomplete explanations, which they don't understand very well themselves.
 
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