|
|
DSL (Digital
Subscriber Line) is a technology for bringing
high-bandwidth information to homes and small businesses
over ordinary copper telephone lines. xDSL
refers to different variations of DSL,
such as ADSL, HDSL, and
RADSL. Assuming your home or small business
is close enough to a telephone company central office that
offers DSL service, you may be able to receive data at rates
up to 6.1 megabits (millions of bits) per second (of a theoretical
8.448 megabits per second), enabling continuous transmission
of motion video, audio, and even 3-D effects. More typically,
individual connections will provide from 1.544 Mbps to 512
Kbps downstream and about 128 Kbps upstream.
A DSL line can carry both
data and voice signals and the data part of the line is
continuously connected. DSL installations began in 1998
and will continue at a greatly increased pace through the
next decade in a number of communities in the U.S. and elsewhere.
Compaq, Intel, and Microsoft working with telephone companies
have developed a standard and easier-to-install form of
ADSL called G.lite that is accelerating
deployment. DSL is expected to replace
ISDN in many areas and to compete with the cable modem in
bringing multimedia and 3-D to homes and small businesses.
ATM
Services Provided by:
|
|