OSI Model Analogy -- Indiana Term Paper

PAGES
2
WORDS
580
Cite

Next, Dr. Jones takes the map, scans it into an image format and posts it to a secured area of his website. He sends the link to his closest advisors globally and asks them for feedback. He's careful to embed all the information in the actual graphic, not having any text that could potentially be hacked or taken. He also asks for return receipt of each e-mail announcing the map, and each of this peers across the universities of the world immediately respond back with questions, some with critical analysis, but mostly with interest in finding the golden monkeys of Sustantivo. This completes the data link layer.

Next, Dr. Jones begins to assemble his team of researchers who will attempt to burrow deep down into the caves below Sustantivo. Natasha has purchased one of the largest buildings in this oldest area of Rio and it...

...

They use this as a jump-off point. For security, Natasha has installed laptops that had seismic sensors in them that also had screens that were bidirectional in capturing and sending images. Understandingly governments were very concerned about this technology as it could turn literally millions of PCs into spies overnight. Dr. Jones called it the Forbidden Browser. This is the network layer of the model.
With the team assembled and the building purchased, it was time to begin researching the paths to the ancient temple through both online and seismic analysis. This is the network layer.

As a knowledge base was developed about the temple and seismic readings indicate that the caves stretched on for miles hundreds of feet below the city of Rio, Dr. Jones began to create a shared

Cite this Document:

"OSI Model Analogy -- Indiana" (2010, July 08) Retrieved April 24, 2024, from
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/osi-model-analogy-indiana-9830

"OSI Model Analogy -- Indiana" 08 July 2010. Web.24 April. 2024. <
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/osi-model-analogy-indiana-9830>

"OSI Model Analogy -- Indiana", 08 July 2010, Accessed.24 April. 2024,
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/osi-model-analogy-indiana-9830

Related Documents

Analogy Just as the speaker in the song knows that she is a hero to her daughter, so too does the narrator of the essay. The narrator in the essay states her desire "to be her hero, to have no fear, to watch her grow and eventually watch her raise her own children." Similarly, the speaker in the song states, "An' though she'll grow an', some day, leave: Maybe raise a family."

Analogy of Racial Segregation The consequences of past events can teach us lessons, shaping the way we think today. For instance, racial segregation, which was established by the Jim Crow laws of the Civil War period and ended in the 1960s with the Civil Rights Act, saw the public separation of blacks and whites. Lessons were learned in that the unethical condition of segregation was recognized, but nearly a century

This discussion of value, however, does not take into account religious viewpoints on the relative value of each human soul. If each embryo is theoretically imbued with a soul and each soul has limitless value, then the balance shifts. Argument from Statistics #1 (total): "In 1976, Washington, D.C., enacted one of the most restrictive gun control laws in the nation. Since then, the city's murder rate has risen 134% while

This will allow for any criminal acts to be noticed and even prevented. With the same justification, can state propose to install cameras in the individuals' homes and monitor the activity there? Obviously not, and the main argumentation that refutes this is the fact that the individual's home is a private place and, additionally, a place where the individual likes to enjoy his privacy. Continuing with analogies in this area,

There they see just how far removed from reality they previously were. In the cave, they knew only shadows of what were only copies of ordinary objects; in the light of the sun they are able to see the objects themselves and finally the sun itself, which gives being to all else. (79) While Plato's forms may be difficult to conceptualize, these remains the perfect embodiment of what these objects

Plato's Cave Analogy In Book 7 of the Republic, Plato attempted to characterize a philosopher king and to describe the kind knowledge that is necessary for a philosopher king. He defines a philosopher as a lover of knowledge. And this knowledge must be of things as they are and not simply of belief. The Analogy of the Cave is used to compare the effect and the lack of knowledge or education