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Part I
Getting Your House In Order
Hour
1 "The Telephone Analogy": Becoming Familiar with Basic Networking
Concepts
2 "You Can't Have Too Much Documentation, Money, or Love!"
Hour 1
The Telephone Analogy: Becoming Familiar with Basic Networking Concepts
Trying to understand the pieces and parts that make up a computer
network can be pretty daunting, even to folks who are fairly computer
literate in other areas. If you're already familiar with network terms
and concepts, you can skip this hour and move on to bigger and better
things; if you're not, here's a good way to get comfortable with the
basics of network technology.
Getting a handle on something foreign to you by using terms and
concepts you already know is a good way to learn it faster. Learning
the lingo helps a lot, but even getting good at the jargon does you no
good if you don't have something familiar with which to compare the
new terms.
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The following term comparisons are analogies. They are not
identical; be careful not to assume they are.
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Therefore, it might help you to consider that computer networks are
very much like the public telephone network. Although many differences
exist under the hood, there are enough similarities on the surface to
allow you to start to get a good concept of how a network really
works. In theory, network calls act very much like telephone calls.
See Figure 1.1 for a rough comparison of a data network to the
telephone system. Also, here's a quick reference list:
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Network Buzzword Telephone Equivalent
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NIC (network interface card) The telephone in your house.
Network media (cabling) The phone wire.
Address The telephone number (167.195.162.5 is no more intimidating
than 1-212-888-5555).
Router or gateway The telephone company's central office equipment
that connects different "area codes."
Switch or bridge The local phone box that connects private lines and
"party lines" (hubs).
Hub or concentrator The party line shared by folks in a common area.
Protocol The language. You can communicate with someone only if you
both understand the language being used. Any language can be used for
any kind of conversation, but some languages are more suited to
certain situations (Italian is best for opera, French for love poems,
and so on).
Packet or frame A sentence of a conversation (not the entire
conversation, but one idea from it).
Socket The extension. Suppose you want to speak to Ms. Jones, who
works at Company XYZ. Typically, you'll call Company XYZ's main phone
number and ask for Ms. Jones's extension.
Program or service The entity on the other end of the line that can
provide information, or a service that you get during a conversation.
Once you get Ms. Jones on the line by asking for her extension, you
can then ask her how much a particular gadget costs, or you can ask
her to send a technician out to install your gadget. Not all services
can handle more than one protocol-just as not all people speak more
than one language.
Directory services (WINS, DNS) The "electronic" phone book. Instead of
having to remember that Ms. Jones's number is 1-212-888-5555, you can
simply perform an automatic lookup-and-dial on "Ms. Jones."
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[01-01t.jpg]
Figure 1.1 A rough comparison of a data network versus the telephone
system.
Network Interface Cards
As mentioned earlier, your telephone is very much like the network
interface card (NIC) in your computer. Both of them help an individual
entity (you, in the case of your telephone, and your computer, in the
case of the NIC) talk to others. Also, both the telephone and the
network card are oblivious to who is being communicated with and what
kind of business is being transacted.
Your telephone is a physical piece of hardware that enables you to
connect through telephone company equipment to talk to folks next door
or halfway around the world. This is also true of your NIC. It can
talk to other NICs on the same line as well as NICs on different lines
by using switching equipment that's connected to the line.
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