Introduction and History of Modems
Introduction
The modem is a device used in affecting communications between computers across
telephone lines. The word modem is derived from the combination of the words
modulation and demodulation. For it is these two functions that the modem performs.
It takes digital data from a computer and modulates it into an analog signal
to be passed along the telephone line. At the other end, another modem demodulates
the signal back to the original digital form so the receiving computer can interpret
it.
History
It was in the 1950s that the first modems were being developed. There was a
need to transmit data for North American air defense, so efforts were made to
accomplish the goal of data transfer across the existing telephone wires. The
air defense was using modems by the end of the 1950s, but the first commercial
device was not available until 1962. It was called the Bell 103, by AT&T.
This first modem allowed full-duplex transmission, and boasted data rates up
to 300 bits per second. Shortly after the Bell 103, there came the Bell 212,
which reached speeds of 1200 bits per second. It also employed a method of modulation
called phase-shift keying (PSK). This was a step up from the frequency-shift
keying (FSK) method that the Bell 103 employed.
Over the next fifteen years, the efforts were to make the modems transmit data
at a higher rate. In order to accomplish this, the telephone system required
some improvement. As it was, due to mutual interference of signals being attenuated
at various rates through the system, there was smearing of data symbols. To
compensate for this, equalizers needed to be applied to the telephone lines.
The automatic adaptive equalizer was invented in 1965 at Bell Laboratories by
Robert Lucky. While equalizers had been used for some time, they required human
intervention to be adjusted appropriately. With the advent of the automatic
adaptive equalizer, data could be transmitted at high rates, as was desired.
Modem technology also improved in this time, and by 1980, there existed modems
that could transmit up to 14.4 kilobits per second over four-wire leased lines.
By 1984, modems were to the point of transmitting 9.6 kilobits per second over a single-pair circuit on the telephone system. To make this a reality, advances were made in echo cancellation, which keeps the sending modem from picking up its transmitted signal on its own receiver. This problem, of course, only presented itself when trying to send high speed data over a single circuit. Additionally, a new coded modulation with error correcting codes was developed. This integral error correction made the signal less susceptible to noise.
Using the same
sort of technology, modem speeds were increased to 14.4 kilobits per second
by 1991. Then, in 1994, it doubled to 28.8 kilobits per second. Soon after,
there came 33.6, which was thought to be an upper limit for phone line transmisions.
But along came the 56k modem, and a new set of standards, so the speeds continue
to push the envelope of the capacity of the telephone system.