| |
| Teracom Newsletter: December 2007 |
| |
|
In this issue:
· TELECOM 101 textbook - brand-new third edition for 2008
· TUTORIAL: TCP/IP over MPLS (free sample! this is section 18.8 of the new Telecom 101)
· Textbook and videos on sale this week only
· Telecom 101 textbook: 50% off
· Video sets: 30% off plus free Telecom 101 textbook
Sale ends Dec 21. Quantities are limited.
|
| |
 |
| |
| TELECOM 101 Textbook - Brand-new Third Edition for 2008 |
|
Telecom 101 is the three course workbooks from our acclaimed core training Course 101 Telecom, Datacom and Networking
for Non-Engineers combined together into a single professionally-bound softcover textbook with a laminated cover, 400 pages,
177 diagrams and a full index. |
| |
| The brand-new third edition for 2008 is completely revised and updated, with complete coverage of telecom, datacom, IP and networking fundamentals plus up-to-date information on VoIP, MPLS, IP, DSL, the latest wireless technologies and more. |
| |
| |
|
|
Organized in logical chapters covering all major topics, packed with information, authoritative and up to date, this telecom book is an invaluable study guide and day-to-day reference.
Free bonus!
electronic version
|
|
|
|
| |
|
|
| |
Specifically Designed for Non-Engineers
We'll bust buzzwords, demystify jargon, and cut through doubletalk. You'll fill in gaps, build a solid, structured base of knowledge and learn how everything fits together... knowledge and understanding that lasts a lifetime. |
| |
Tested, Refined and Proven Content
Combining three workbooks formatted into a standard 7” x 9” softcover textbook with high-quality paper, a laminated cover and professional binding, 400 pages, over 177 diagrams and a full index, the Telecom 101 volume has three parts: |
• Fundamentals of Telecommunications,
• Understanding Data Communications and
• Understanding IP and Networking, |
| with the same content as the course workbooks for our three-day core training Course 101 Telecom, Datacom and Networking for Non-Engineers, plus additional bonus sections. |
| |
| This content, tuned and refined over the course of fifteen years, has been taught to thousands of people needing to build a solid, structured understanding of telecom, datacom, IP and networking. |
| |
| A high percentage of seminar attendees specifically praise the course materials on seminar evaluations – materials now available in softcover textbook format in Telecom 101. |
| |
| Recently, a US Army communications specialist deployed to Iraq called it a “lifesaver” when contacting to us to order his own copy after the owner of the one he was borrowing demanded it back! |
| |
An Invaluable Reference
The material covers telecom, datacom and networking from A-Z, organized in logical chapters covering all major topics, and written in our signature "telecom for non-engineers" style. It will be an invaluable day-to-day handbook, either on its own, or to complement instructor and DVD video training. |
| |
• |
As a companion to instructor-led training, Telecom 101 allows you to study before attending Course 101 or fill in gaps before attending one of our advanced courses. |
| • |
After DVD video or instructor-led training, it will serve as an invaluable day-to-day reference.
|
|
• |
On its own, Telecom 101 is used by many as an economical and convenient way to self-study… these are the materials to an instructor-led course that costs $995 to attend. |
|
|
| |
|
|
Free electronic version. Fully-hyperlinked table of contents beside the text provides pinpoint navigation. Ideal for study at home, on the plane or immediate reference in buzzword-filled meetings.
details claim your bonus |
|
|
|
| |
Value Pricing
If sold separately, the price for these three books would be:
Fundamentals of Telecommunications: $118, plus
Understanding Data Communications: $118, plus
Understanding IP and Networking: $118
for a total of US$354 for all three books if purchased separately. |
| |
Now, you can get all three books bound in one volume called Telecom 101 for the low price of US$179.US$89 on sale. Plus, you get the bonus electronic version, a US$49 value, free! Compare this to hunting down and paying for multiple books by different authors that may or may not cover what you need to know- and you'll agree this is a very attractive deal. |
| |
| Career- and productivity-enhancing training... an investment that will be repaid many times over. Hurry! Quantities available are limited. Order today to avoid disappointment. |
| |
AT A GLANCE
Written by our top instructor, Eric C. Coll, M.Eng., P.Eng, Telecom 101 contain 25 years of knowledge and learning distilled and organized into an invaluable study guide and practical day-to-day reference for non-engineers: |
| |
Part 1: Fundamentals of Telecommunications
Introduction, the Three Answers, telecom services, telecom networks
Telephony, loops and trunks, the PSTN, POTS, analog, voiceband, SS7
PBX and Centrex, IVRs, ACDs, call centers, modems, DSL
Telecom industry, LECs, CLECs, IXCs, POPs
Digital: DS0, DS1, DS3, T1, ISDN
TDM, the network "cloud", network equipment, fiber, SONET, DWDM
T1, channels, framing, pulses and repeaters, muxes and cross-connects
Wireless: cellular, CDMA, TDMA/GSM, 3G 1X & UMTS, satellite, Wi-Fi, WiMAX
Voice services and jargon
Part 2: Understanding Data Communications
Datacom basics: DTEs, DCEs, LANs and WANs
Packets and frames, IP packets, Ethernet frames
Modems: modulation techniques, standards, performance
Broadband modems: DSL, VDSL, cable modems, broadband wireless
LANs: broadcast domains, 802.3 & Ethernet, cables, LAN switches
Part 3: Understanding IP and Networking
OSI model, layers, protocol stacks, standards
IP addresses: static/dynamic, public/private, NAT, IPv4 and IPv6
WANs, routers, edge routers, statistical TDM, dealing with carriers
Bandwidth on demand, packet networks, virtual circuits Frame Relay, Quality of Service (QoS), ATM, MPLS and TCP/IP over MPLS
Voice over IP and VPNs
The Internet: ISPs, DNS, HTML, the Web
Practical networking solutions |
| |
| Full Table of Contents |
| |
| Ideal for anyone needing an authoritative, up-to-date reference covering all major topics in telecommunications, data communications, IP and networking… in plain English. A wealth of clear, concise, organized knowledge, impossible to find in one place anywhere else! |
| |
|
|
|
|
|
| |
 |
| |
| Tutorial: TCP/IP over MPLS |
| Following is a section from the new edition of Telecom 101, tracing the flow of information from server to client over a TCP/IP/MPLS protocol stack. |
| |
| 18.8 TCP/IP Over MPLS
MPLS is deployed for managing traffic on IP networks, and in conjunction with other technologies like VPNs covered in Chapter 19, will end up replacing all other services, including dedicated T1s, Frame Relay, ATM and ISDN.
Since MPLS is a virtual circuit technology, the packet flow from server to client over an MPLS network is similar to the Frame Relay flow examined earlier.
Starting with the server on the right, which is downloading a file to the client on the left, we take a chunk of the file and give it to the TCP software running on the server. That puts a sequence number, error check and application port number on the chunk of the file, passes this to the IP software on the server and starts a timer. The IP software adds the source and destination IP addresses to form an IP packet, which is put in an 802.3 LAN frame (that uses the 802.2 logical link layer protocol), with the MAC address of the premise router on the right pasted on the frame. The frame is then broadcast onto the Gigabit Ethernet over copper (1000BASE-T) LAN on the right and directed to the premise router by the LAN switch.
The premise router on the right brings in the LAN frame, extracts the packet and passes it to the routing software on the premise router, which makes a routing decision, puts the packet in a LAN frame, changes the MAC address, recalculates the error check and sends it over the Gigabit Ethernet over fiber (1000BASE-LX) access circuit to the service provider’s MPLS network.

FIGURE 153 TCP/IP OVER MPLS
The service provider receives this packet with an ingress Label Switching Router (LSR). That device examines the IP address on the packet and along with other factors, decides what Forwarding Equivalence Class the packet belongs to, and implements its decision by labelling the packet with a 20-bit label identifying the FEC. It then does a table lookup to determine what network device packets with this label are forwarded to, and transmits the labelled packet in a frame on the appropriate circuit.
Each LSR in the middle of the network (not shown) brings in the frame, extracts the packet then only looks at the label and performs a table lookup to determine where to forward it and what priority to give it.
Eventually the labelled packet is delivered to the network’s egress LSR on the left. This device removes the label from the packet and uses conventional IP routing to send the packet in an Ethernet frame to the customer’s premise router on the left.
The premise router on the left brings in the packet, and looks in a table to find out what MAC address (what LAN card) is currently assigned that IP address. If it does not find an entry, it broadcasts an address resolution request on the LAN at the left using the Address Resolution Protocol (ARP), asking “who owns this IP address?” The client responds with its MAC address. The premise router puts the packet in a LAN frame with that MAC address on the front, and broadcasts the frame onto the LAN at the left. The LAN switch on the left directs the frame to the client on the left.
The client pulls in the frame, extracts the packet and gives it to the IP software on the client. Seeing that the destination IP address on the packet is the same as its address, the client’s IP software extracts the data out of the packet and gives it to the TCP software on the client. This checks the error check, and if it fails, discards the data.
Shortly after, the TCP timer on the server times out, so the TCP software on the right retransmits the data. Let’s say the second time, it passes the error check at the client, so the client TCP software sends an acknowledgement to the server, then extracts the data from the TCP protocol data unit and parks it in a memory space for the application identified by the port number on the TCP header… the file transfer application, which picks up the data shortly after.
Meanwhile, we’re sending the next one.
|
|
| |
|
Want more ?
There is, of course, much more to the story than this brief tutorial.
This discussion is actually the final discussion in a whole chapter that leads up to it, starting with bandwidth on demand and packet network fundamentals, ideas like virtual circuits and jargon like connectionless network services, then going through the technologies: X.25, Frame Relay, TCP/IP over Frame Relay, understanding what is needed for voice over packet networks, how Frame Relay doesn't do it, but ATM was supposed to, then MPLS and how QoS is implemented with MPLS and finally the discussion above.
This topic is covered in more detail in Teracom instructor-led courses, DVD video Computer-Based Training courses, and textbooks.
Telecom 101 textbook, 3rd edition: Chapter 18 (26 pages)
Course 101 Telecom, Datacom and Networking for Non-Engineers: Chapter 15
Course 110 Understanding IP Telecom: IP, VoIP and MPLS for Non-Engineers: Chapters 5, 8 and 13
DVD 4 Understanding Networking 1: Part 3
|
| |
 |
| |
| Here are a few links that you may find useful: |
| |
|
|
| |
Privacy policy: We hate spam as much as you do.
We will NEVER give your email address or any other personally-identifying information about you to anyone without your explicit consent. full statement |
| |
| About this email: We are sending you this message following your request to receive information from Teracom Training Institute. If you have received this message in error, and/or no longer wish to receive these messages, please accept our apologies for the inconvenience and click here to visit our web site to take your name off our private mailing list. Simply sign in to your myTeracom account, and click the link for "Newsletter subscription" under My Account Settings, and uncheck the newsletter subscription box on your myTeracom profile. |
| |
If this message was forwarded to you...
To receive future issues of the Teracom Training Institute newsletter, be informed of new tutorials, video releases, seminars and special offers, add yourself to our private mailing list. We'll never give your e-mail address to anyone. You can unsubscribe at any time. |
| |
| Copyright © Teracom Training Institute. All rights reserved. privacy policy |
| |
| Your colleagues may be interested... would you please forward this to them? |
| |
Many thanks,
Teracom Training Institute |
| |
|
|
|
|