We offer new & refurbished terminals, toner cartridges, ribbons, printers and barcode readers & scanners at factory direct prices.
Home    About Us   Shipping   Support & Drivers   Repairs   Contact Us    My Account
refurbished
  Shopping Cart
0 items
Main Page All Products Checkout My Account HACKER SAFE certified sites prevent over 99.9% of hacker crime.
Online Status
Yahoo! Messenger
Our Products
  Printers
  Terminals
  Toner
  Barcode Printers
  Tabloid Printers
  Plate Making Printers
  Barcode Scanners
  Receipt Printers
  Scanners
  Fusers
  Cables
  Repairs
  Ribbons
  Logic Boards & Parts
  Printheads
  Accessories
Manufacturers
Product Condition
Whats New  more
Black Okidata ML 186 Printer 62422301 Parallel & usb Refurbished OKI
Black Okidata ML 186 Printer 62422301 Parallel & usb Refurbished OKI
$215.00
Information
Contact Us
About Us
Repair Department
Security & Privacy Policies
Shipping Map
Articles
FAQ
Press Releases (1)
Support & Drivers (11)
Refurb Process
Tips & Tricks (7)
YouTube Videos
The Difference Between Parallel and Serial Communications

 

Serial Communications and Parallel communications both define a way of transporation of data over networks.

In Serial devices: transmit data bit-after-bit, serially over time. When 8 bits are received, after 8 bit-times (plus a little extra for signal synchronization), they are assembled back into a byte and delivered to the software.


In Parallel communication: a word of some data length, say like 8 bits, travels all at once, along multiple parallel channels (one channel per bit position). At the receiver, an 8-bit byte is received every "bit time". In effect, you have 8 serial channels transmitting and receiving data simultaneously, making it (by definition) at least 8 times faster than a single serial channel using the same transceiver technology.


From a system perspective, you can also refer to "parallel" channels for redundancy of critical serial streams, where multiple identical copies of data are sent simultaneously, and the receiver decides which data is valid, often by "voting" after detecting errors in the data on one or more channels. In this case, the parallel channels provide no increase in data throughput (compared to a single error-free channel), other than by reducing the need for time-consuming re-transmissions when errors are detected. It is a trade-off between speed and reliability.

 

Products related to this article:
Okidata ML 320 Turbo printer 320T 62411603 oki
Okidata ML 320 Turbo printer 320T 62411603 oki
Okidata 300 oki 500 Series Serial Card 70012801
Okidata 300 oki 500 Series Serial Card 70012801
Oki Pacemark 3410 Printer + Bottom Feed part # 61800801
Oki Pacemark 3410 Printer + Bottom Feed part # 61800801
Okidata Oki 395 Interface Board - Parallel Serial
Okidata Oki 395 Interface Board - Parallel Serial
Wyse WY-60 Terminal 900109-01 WYSE 60
Wyse WY-60 Terminal 900109-01 WYSE 60
Wyse WY-150 Terminal 900983-01 WYSE 150
Wyse WY-150 Terminal 900983-01 WYSE 150

Refurbished Printers | Refurbished Terminals | Printer Repair | Terminal Repair | HP Laserjet Printers | Thin Client Terminals

Barcode Equipment | Print Heads | Toner Cartridges | Fuser Assemblies | Oki Dot Matrix Printers | HP Platemakers

Wyse WinTerms | Receipt Printers | Barcode Scanners | JetDirect Cards | Thermal Barcode Printers | Color Laser Printers



Additional Options
Our Security and Privacy Policies Copyright © 2007 The Printer Exchange, Inc.