Social Sciences, asked by neneo92, 1 year ago

Difference between bit oriented and character oriented protocol

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Answered by Shaizakincsem
8
A bit-oriented protocol is an interchanges convention that sees the transmitted information as a hazy stream of bits with no semantics or significance. Control codes are characterized as far as bit successions rather than characters. The bit-oriented protocol can exchange information outlines paying little heed to outline substance.

Byte-oriented framing protocol is "a correspondences convention in which full bytes are utilized as control codes. Otherwise called a character-oriented convention." For instance, UART correspondence is byte-oriented. The expression "character-oriented" is belittled since the notion of character has changed.
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