Networking Homework

1. Read the text and answer the questions that follow. ANSWER THE QUESTIONS THAT FOLLOW IN THE COMMENTS BELOW. IF YOU DON’T DO THIS, I WILL UNDERSTAND YOU HAVE IGNORED THE HOMEWORK.

As developing countries seek to upgrade their telecoms networks,

they are faced with difficult choices

On the one hand, they have the advantage of being able to forget about rolling out national fixed line networks. In some countries, teledensity is as low as 4%, so expanding a wired network to cover an entire population is far too luxurious. The result is that they can outpass an old technology and move straight to a national wireless network to provide broadband and voice (VolP) services.

On the other hand, there is a tough choice to make – Wi-Max or 3G?

In many developing counties, Wi-Max (Worldwide interoperability for Microwave Access) has already rocketed. It delivers high-speed access wirelessly, enabling fixed and mobile broadband services over large coverage areas. It is an IP-based system and comes in two versions, fixed and mobile. Fixed Wi-Max is suited for delivering wireless last mile access for fixed broadband services, similar to DSL. Mobile Wi-Max supports both fixed and mobile applications with improved performance and capacity while adding full mobility. In India, Tata has launched what it says will be the world’s biggest Wi-Max network, with an assumptive cost of $600 million.

In the other corner is 3G (and coming soon, 4G and LTE), a well-established wireless network in developed countries. 3G has evolved from the voice-centric telecoms world but is able to deliver not just voice but high-speed broadband access on a par. The last ten years have seen the growth of huge networks in the developed world, and emerging nations are catching up rapidly. China is investing billions of dollars in rolling out a nationwide 3G network that will reach 703/4 of the population, and the Asia Pacific region is expected to have over 500 million 3G subscribers in the next few years.

In the longer term, we are already starting to see the convergence of Wi-Max and 3G. While Wi-Max has broadened to become more mobile and capable of being made use of for media services, 3G cellular has become increasingly broadband, resulting in practical convergence between these fields of development. What’s more, both are driven to use the same core sets of technologies.

At the moment, developing countries still have to make a choice between the two systems, and are faced with the familiar Betamax vs VHS or BluRay vs HO decision. But if the two technologies can co-operate rather than compete, then the future of broadband and voice services in developing countries will go a long way.

  • Why are some developing countries not developing their wired networks?
  • What suggests that Wi-Max and 3G are equally suitable for developing countries?
  • According to the text, what will happen to Wi-Max and 3G in the future?

 

2.  Choose the correct options in the word quizz.

2.1. Now your task you may need to come back to our lesson .. Fill in the gaps with some of the bolded words from the text and the previous lesson.
2.2. Now use some of the words/expressions in the following extracts.
3. Finally, use rewrite the following sentences using Conditionals 2 and 3. WRITE FULL FORMS (HADN’T ->HAD NOT).

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