Entangled photons are at the heart of experimental quantum physics. They were used for the first fundamental tests of quantum theory, and became a basic building block for many novel quantum protocols, such as quantum cryptography, dense coding or teleportation. Therefore, the efficient generation of entangled photons, as well as their distribution and accurate analysis are of paramount importance, particularly with regard to the practicability of many applications of quantum communication. This thesis deals largely with the problem of efficient generation of photonic entanglement with the principal aim of developing a\nbright source of polarization-entangled photon pairs, which meets the requirements for reliable and economic operation of quantum communication prototypes and demonstrators. Our approach uses a correlated photon-pair emission in nonlinear process of spontaneous parametric down-conversion pumped by light coming from a compact and cheap blue laser diode. Two alternative source configurations are examined within the thesis. The first makes use of a well established concept of degenerate non-collinear emission from a single type-II nonlinear crystal and the second relies on a novel method where the emissions from two adjacent type-I phase-matched nonlinear crystals operated in collinear non-degenerate regime are coherently overlapped. The latter approach showed to be more effective, yielding a total detected rate of almost 10^6 pairs/s at >98 % quantum interference visibility of polarization correlations. This performance, together with the almost free of alignment operation of the system, suggest that it is an especially promising candidate for\nmany future practical applications, including quantum cryptography, detector calibration or use in undergraduate lab courses. The second issue addressed within the thesis is the simplification and practical implementation of quantum-assisted solutions to multiparty communication tasks. While the recent rapid progress in the development of bright entangled photon-pair sources has been followed with ample experimental reports on two-party quantum communication tasks, the practical implementations of tasks for more than two parties have been held back, so far. This is mainly due to the requirement of multiparty entangled states, which are\nvery difficult to be produced with current methods and moreover suffer from a high noise. We show that entanglement is not the only non-classical resource endowing the quantum multiparty information processing its power. Instead, only the sequential communication and transformation of a single qubit can be sufficient to accomplish certain tasks. This we prove for two distinct communication tasks, secret sharing and communication complexity. Whereas the goal of the first is to split a cryptographic key among several parties in a way that its reconstruction requires their collaboration, the latter aims at reducing the amount of communication during distributed computational tasks. Importantly, our qubit-assisted solutions to the problems are feasible with state-of-the-art technology. This we clearly demonstrate in the laboratory implementation for 6 and 5 parties, respectively, which is to the best of our knowledge the highest number of actively performing parties in a quantum protocol ever implemented. Thus, by successfully solving and implementing a cryptographic task as well as a task originating in computer science, we clearly illustrate the potential to introduce multiparty communication problems into real life.