What This Document Is
This document is a completed homework assignment for CIS 66, Introduction to Data Communication and Networking at De Anza College, submitted by Jader Ricarte. It addresses a series of problems related to digital transmission, encoding, and channel capacity.
Why This Document Matters
This assignment is intended for students enrolled in CIS 66 who are learning the fundamental principles of data communication. It serves as a practice exercise to reinforce concepts covered in lectures and the course textbook. Instructors use assignments like this to assess student understanding of key topics.
Common Limitations or Challenges
This document represents a student’s attempt to solve the assigned problems. It does not provide explanations of the underlying concepts, nor does it guarantee a correct solution to every problem. It is a completed assignment, not a teaching resource.
What This Document Provides
The assignment covers topics including clock synchronization in digital transmission, differential Manchester encoding, NRZ-I signal energy calculations, 4B/5B block encoding, channel capacity with different signaling levels (ASK, FSK, BPSK, QAM), and Time Division Multiplexing (TDM) – both synchronous and statistical. Specifically, it includes answers to problems involving bit rate calculations, frame size determination, and efficiency analysis within TDM systems. This preview does *not* include the solutions themselves, only a listing of the topics addressed.