Asynchronous Digital Subscriber Line: Difference between revisions
Appearance
Content deleted Content added
added ATM bit + clarification |
m Automated conversion |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
'Asynchronous Digital Subscriber Line' is a misnomer for '''Asymmetric Digital Subscriber Line''' or [[ADSL]] |
|||
Using bandwidth higher that that of voice signals on the telephone line, it is always on, requiring no dialing to initiate a connection. To optimize performance in typical applications, it is asymmetric: the received or downstream rate is higher than the transmitted or upstream rate. Data and analog voice communications occur simultaneously on the same telephone line. |
|||
Upstream rates are typically 256 kbps. |
|||
Downstream rates can be as high as 6 Mbps over short ranges, although 2 Mbps is more common. |
|||
Because of the relatively low data rate (compared to optical backbone networks) [[ATM]] is an appropriate technology for multiplexing time-critical data such as digital voice with less critical data such as Web traffic; ATM is widely employed over ADSL technology to ensure that this remains a possibility. |
|||
See also: |
|||
*[[DSL]] |
|||
*[[SDSL]] |
|||
*[[ISDN]] |
|||
Revision as of 15:33, 26 January 2002
'Asynchronous Digital Subscriber Line' is a misnomer for Asymmetric Digital Subscriber Line or ADSL