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Asynchronous communication

Transmission of data at irregular intervals


Summary

Transmission of data at irregular intervals

In telecommunications, asynchronous communication is transmission of data, generally without the use of an external clock signal, where data can be transmitted intermittently rather than in a steady stream. Any timing required to recover data from the communication symbols is encoded within the symbols.

The most significant aspect of asynchronous communications is that data is not transmitted at regular intervals, thus making possible variable bit rate, and that the transmitter and receiver clock generators do not have to be exactly synchronized all the time. In asynchronous transmission, data is sent one byte at a time and each byte is preceded by start and stop bits.

Physical layer

Main article: Asynchronous serial communication

In asynchronous serial communication in the physical protocol layer, the data blocks are code words of a certain word length, for example octets (bytes) or ASCII characters, delimited by start bits and stop bits. A variable-length space can be inserted between the code words. No bit synchronization signal is required. This is sometimes called character-oriented communication. Examples include MNP2 and modems older than V.2.

Application layer

An asynchronous communication service or application does not require a constant bit rate. Examples are file transfer, email and the World Wide Web. An example of the opposite, a synchronous communication service, is real-time streaming media, for example IP telephony, IPTV and video conferencing.

Electronically mediated communication

Electronically mediated communication often happens asynchronously in that the participants do not communicate concurrently. Examples include email | editor1-last = Khosrowpour | editor1-first = Mehdi | publication-date = 2006 | access-date = 2014-09-03 and bulletin-board systems, where participants send or post messages at different times than they read them. The term "asynchronous communication" acquired currency in the field of online learning, where teachers and students often exchange information asynchronously instead of synchronously (that is, simultaneously), as they would in face-to-face or in telephone conversations.

References

References

  1. Beal, Vangie. (September 1, 1996). "asynchronous". Webopedia.
  2. (2001). "Hargrave's Communication Dictionary". Wiley.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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