Saturday, July 20, 2019
Osi Model Essay -- Networks Telecommunications
UNDERSTANDING THE OSI MODEL AND THE RELATIONSHIP WITH TCP/IP    The Open Systems Interconnection (OSI) model is a reference tool for understanding data  communications between any two networked systems. It divides the communications processes into  seven layers. Each layer both performs specific functions to support the layers above it and offers  services to the layers below it. The three lowest layers focus on passing traffic through the network to  an end system. The top four layers come into play in the end system to complete the process.  This presentation will provide you with an understanding of each of the seven layers, including their  functions and their relationships to each other. This will provide you with an overview of the network  process, which can then act as a framework for understanding the details of computer networking. Also  this paper will explain how the 802 specifications expanded the OSI reference model by dividing the  data link layer into two layers.  Finally, this paper will draw comparisons between the theoretical OSI model and the functional  TCP/IP model. Although TCP/IP has been used for network communications before the adoption of the  OSI model, it supports the same functions and features in a differently layered arrangement.  The history of the development of the OSI model is, for some reason, a little-known story. Much of  the work on the design of OSI was actually done by a group at Honeywell Information Systems, headed  by Mike Canepa, with Charlie Bachman as the principal technical member. This group was chartered,  within Honeywell, with advanced product planning and with the design and development of prototype  systems.  In the early and middle '70s, the interest of Canepa's group was pr...              ...mputer systems  communicate with one another in the world wide web or in a corporate setting.  Personally, I have found that the OSI model relates to just about everything that I have done as an  IT consultant. During computer migrations and configuring desktops to be networked on the corporate  land, enables the workstations to communicate via the OSI model and the TCP/IP model. Having to  map network drives enables users to have extra disk space other than just their hard drive to store data.  When a user retrieves data from a network drive, the total process is through the seven layers of the  OSI model. Configuring email accounts enables users to communicate via email transactions, a process  that uses the OSI model and the TCP/IP model.  References  1. Network Plus Guide to Networks (2002)  2. Ethernet Tutorial (2001)  3. Microsoft's guide to the OSI model (2004)                      
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.