suhtluskanal
Suhtluskanal, Estonian for “communication channel,” denotes the medium or route by which information is transmitted from a sender to a receiver. The concept is used across everyday conversation, organizational communication, media studies, and information technology. A kanal can be interpersonal (face-to-face conversation, telephone, video calls), written (emails, letters, reports), or digital (instant messaging, social media, streaming platforms). In technical contexts, it also refers to the physical medium that carries signals, such as copper cabling, fibre optics, radio waves, or wireless networks, and to the mathematical models that describe how signals are transmitted with potential noise and distortion.
Key properties include richness or capacity, speed, reach, formality, and feedback. Rich media convey more contextual
Channel choice depends on factors such as message complexity, required immediacy, privacy, audience, and cost. Effective
In information theory, a channel is modeled as a system that transmits signals from input to output
Examples: complex negotiations benefit from face-to-face channels; written channels are preferred for documentation; digital channels enable
See also: communication model, media richness theory, Shannon’s information theory.