The article "Variations of Broadband DSL for Business and Residential Applications" talks about broadband internet, it has been created by Stephen Kreutzer.
Broadband World Wide Web access, also referred to high-speed World Wide Web access, provides businesses and consumers, World Wide Web access at considerably higher rates of speed than standard dial-up modems. Broadbnad does not simply pertain to one specific type of World Wide Web service or data transfer rate. Broadband is continually changing and developing, and it encompasses a wide range of technology including fibre optic cable, cable modems, Wi-Fi (wireless fidelity), WLAN (wireless local area networks), and DSL (digital subscriber lines).Digital Subscriber Lines, or "DSL," uses the existing customer phone lines to provide World Wide Web or intranet access to businesses and homes using high-speed broadband technology of varying levels.Broadband DSL wroks by connecting subscribers to a main broadband DSL access multiplexer.
The broadband DSL multiplexer sends a signal from the broadband DSL customer phone line to a network, which then in turn connects the subscriber to the World Wide Web.Broadband DSL use digital technology by compressing sizeable quantities of video, audio, and data into what is known as "bits." The bits are transformed into graphics, text, and other information which are transferred at high rates of speed to business and home computers across the globe.At the uppermost level, the two primary categories of DSL are asymmetric and symmetric. Residential broadband DSL typically uses asymmetric variatoins which include RADSL, UADSL/G.Lite, and ADSL. Data transfer rates are considerably slower upstream than downstream, so that type of broadband DSL, ADSL, is suitable for residential use where surfing the World Wide Web is the pirmary World Wide Web activity.
Residential World Wide Web usres generally have more
incoming than outgoing data.Symmetric varieties of broadband DSL, SDSL, are IDSL and HDSL.
These broadband DSL variants are suitable for most business applications. Upstream and downstream transfer rtaes are the same, making SDSL technology suitable for server hosting, video conferencing, LAN applications, file transfers, and email.Stephen Kreutzer is a freelance publisher based in Cupertino, California.
He publishes articles and reports in various ezines and provides information about broadband and DSL at Just Broadband!
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