Standards determine whether a given modem can successfully connect with any
other modem in the world.
Bell 103 Uses a kind of modulation called Frequency Shift Keying, or KSK, in
	 which a specific tone frequency signifies a digital one and another a
	 digital zero. Each change in the modem's signal thus carries one bit
	 of digital information. Consequently, the Bell 103 standard is the
	 only one in which the baud rate (the rate at which signals change) is
	 equal to the data rate of 300 bps (Bits Per Second).
Bell 212A is the next logical step and the second modem standard to find wide
	 application in the United States. It achieves a data-transfer rate of
	 1,200 bps by using phase modulation of a carrier signal. The phase of
	 a fixed tone, called a carrier wave, is shifted by any of four phase
	 angles. Under Bell 212A, the carrier wave can change phase up to 600
	 times per second, or 600 baud. The four phase states are sufficient
	 to represnet any of four two-bit patterns. Thus each baud can carry
	 two bits of information, raising the actual throughput to twice the
	 baud rate of 1,200 bps.
	 While widely used in America, many foreign countries prohibit the
	 use of Bell 212A, prefering instead the similar international
	 standard, V.22.
NOTE: Why do rockwell controllers, in Bell 212A mode require a CCITT V.22 BIS 
answer tone?
Cause their controller code is buggy! However, they've shipped a few million of 
them, so it's a "standard" now.
LAP-B	 stands for Link Access Procedure, Balanced, an error-correction
	 protocol designed for X.25 packet-switched services like Telebit and
	 Tumnet. Some modem makers adapted it to their dial-up products before
	 the V.42 standard was agreed upon. For example, the Hayes Smartmodem
	 9,600, form Hayes Mirocomputer Products, includes LAP-B error-control
	 capabilities.
LAP-M	 is an acronym for Link Access Procedure for Modems and is the
	 error-correction protocol used by the CCITT V.42 standard.
MNP	 Microcom Networking Protocol is an entire hierarchy of standards,
	 starting with MNP Class 1, a no longer used error correction
	 protocol, and running to MNP Class 10, designed to induce the highest
	 data transfer performance from poor connections, especially those
	 found in cellular phone systems.
	 MNP classes 2 though 4 deal with error control and are in the public
	 domain; classes 5 though 10 are licensed by Microcomm
MNP-2	 is designed to work with any modem capable of full-duplex
	 communications. It works by confirming each byte as it is sent - by
	 having the receiving modem echo back each character.
MNP-3	 improves on MNP-2 by wirking synchronously instead of asyncronously.
	 As a result, no start and stop bits are required for each byte,
	 trimming the data-transfer overhead by 25 percent or more.
MNP-4	 is an error correcting protocal that also yields some data
	 compression. It incorporates two innovations. The first, Adaptive
	 Packet Assembly, allows the modem to package data in blocks or
	 packets sent and error-checked as a unit, The second, Data Phase
	 Optimization, eliminates repetitive control bits from the data
	 traveling across the connection to streamline trasnmissions. Together
	 these techniques can increase the throughput of a modem by 120
	 percent at a given bit rate.
MNP-5	 is purely a data compression protocol that squeezes some types of
	 data into a form that transmits faster. MNP-5 can compress up to a
	 factor of two, effectively doubling the speed of data transmissions.
	 On files that have been already compressed, however, MNP-5 may
	 actually increase the transmission time.
MNP-6	 is designed to help modems get the most out of telephone
	 connections, independent of data compression. Using a technique
	 called Universal Link Negotiation, modems can start communicating at
	 a low speed, then, after evaluating the capabilities of the teliphone
	 line and each modem, switch to a higher speed.
MNP-7	 is a more efficient data compression algorithm (Huffman encodeing)
	 than MNP-5, premitting increases in data throughput as much as
	 threefold on some data.
MNP-8	 was never released.
MNP-9	 is desinged to reduce the transmission overhead required by some
	 common modem operations. The acknowledgments of data packets is
	 streamlined by combining each acknowledgement with the next data
	 packet instead of sending a separate confirmation byte. While some
	 error-correction schemes require all information transmitted after an
	 error to be resent, an MNP-9 modem only requires the incorrect data
	 to be sent again.
MNP-10	 is a set of Adverse Channel Enhancements that help medems work
	 better with poor connections, compensating for line noise, echo
	 problems, and limited bandwidth. Modems with MNP-10 will make
	 multiple attempts to set up a transmission link, optimize the size of
	 data packets for a connections, and adjust to the highest rate
	 possible.
V.22	 is the CCITT equivalent of the Bell 212A standard, a transfer rate
	 of 1,200 bps at 600 baud. It uses the same form of modulation as Bell
	 212A but is not compatible with the bell standard, because it uses a
	 different protocol to set up the connection. Some modems support both
	 standards and allow you to switch between them.
V.22bis was the first true world standard, adopted in both the United States
	 and Europe. It allows a transfer rate of 2,400 bps at 600 baud by
	 using a technique called trellis modulation that mixes two simple
	 kinds of modulation; quadrature and amplitude. Each baud has 16
	 states, enough to code any pattern of four bits. Each state is
	 distinguished both ny its phase relationship to the unaltered carrier
	 and its amplitude (or strength) in relation to the carrier. There are
	 four distinct phases and four distinct amplitudes under V.22bis
V.32	 is an international high speed standard that permits data-transfer
	 rates of 4,800 and 9,600 bps. At 4,800 bps, it uses quadrature
	 amplitude modulation simiar to Bell 212A, but at 2,400 baud rather
	 than 212A's 600 baud. At 9,600 bps, it uses trellis modulation
	 similar to V.22 bis's 600 baud) and with a greater range of phases
	 and amplitudes.
	 Note that while most Group III FAX machines and modems operate at
	 9,600 bps, a FAX modem with 9,600 bps capability isn't necessarily
	 compatible with the V.32 standard.
V.32bis extends the V.32 standard to 14,400 bps, while allowing intermediary
	 speeds of 7,200 and 12,000 bps in addition to the 4,800 and 9,600 bps
	 speeds of V.32.
	 Note that all of these speeds are multiples of a basic 2,400 baud
	 rate. The additional operating speeds available to V.32bis are
	 generated using different ranges of phases and amplitudes in the
	 modulation. At 14,400 bps, there are 128 potentially different
	 phase/amplitude states for each baud under V.32bis, enough to encode
	 seven data bits in each baud. Because there are so many phases and
	 amplitude differences squeezed together, a small change in the
	 characteristics of a telephone line might mimic such a change and
	 cause transmission errors. Consequently, error detection and
	 correction become increasingly important as transmission speed goes
	 up.
V.42	 is a world wide error correction standard designed to help make
	 V.32, V.32bis and other modem communications more reliable. V.42
	 incorporates MNP-4 as an "alternative" protocol. That is, V.42 modems
	 can communicate with MNP-4 modems, though a connection between the
	 two won't use the more sophisicated V.42 error correction protocol.
	 At the beginning of each call, as the connection is being negotiated
	 between modems, a V.42 modem will determine whether MNBP-4 or full
	 V.42 error correction can be used by the other modem, MNP-4 being the
	 second choice.
V.42bis is a data compression protocol endorsed by the CCITT. Different from
	 and incompatible with MNP-5 and MNP-7, V.42bis is more efficient than
	 either. On some forms of data, it can yeild compression factors up to
	 four, potentially quadrupling the speed of modem transmissions. (With
	 PCs, the effective saximum communication rate is limited by the
	 serial port itself to no more that 38,400 bps.) Unlike MNP-5, V.42
	 never slows transmission of "incompressible" data. Worst case
	 operation is the same speed as would be achieved without compression.

See also:


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