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how is data retrieved from the telephone? the transmitter converts the sound waves to electrical signals which are sent through the telephone network to the receiving phone. the receiving telephone converts the signals into audible sound in the receiver.
The (any) VoIP network does not require repeaters as the voice signal is not sent using electrical pulses over telephone line. It is converted into data by an ATA (analog telephone adapter) and then sent as data over the internet. Thus, eliminating signal degrading. However a new kind of loss is encountered, packet loss, that is unusual, but can create what is called jitter on the line.
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DATA WILL BE SENT IN DUAL YET IN SERIES DATA WILL BE SENT IN ASINGLE LINE
A modem allows data to be transferred over a telephone line. It is a combination of MOdulate - DEModulate. One device modulates a digital signal from the computer into an analog signal for the telephone line, then the other device demodulates the signal back into digital for the receiving computer.
Process by which a message is sent from a single host to all hosts on the network, without regard to the kind of data being sent or the destination of the data.
Process by which a message is sent from a single hosts on the network, without regard to the kind of data being sent or the destination of the data
Convergence
It means how much data has been sent up and down your LAN line.
Also called as facsimile, fax is a document sent or transfered through a telephone line. Today, fax has upgraded tp internet fax where documents can be sent and received simultaneously.
Data may be sent to another location. What happens will be decided by how the page is designed and where the designer wants to send the data and how it is to be sent. So there is not a single answer to the question.
Electrical impulses sent down the phone-line are converted back into sound by the phone's electronics.