Saturday, December 10, 2011

What Is ADSL? Asymmetric Digital Subscriber Line

ADSL (Asymmetric Digital Subscriber Line) is a technology for transmitting digital information at a high bandwidth on existing phone lines to homes and businesses. Unlike regular dialup phone service, ADSL provides continously-available,  an "always on" connection. ADSL is asymmetric in that it uses most of the channel to transmit downstream to the user and only a small part to receive information up from the user. ADSL simultaneously accommodates analog (voice) information on the same line. ADSL is generally offered at downstream data rates from 512 Kbps to about 6 Mbps. A form of ADSL, known as Universal ADSL or G.lite, has been approved as a standard by the ITU-TS.

ADSL was specifically designed to exploit the one-way nature of most multimedia communications in which large amounts of information flows toward or downloads the user and only a small amount of interactive control information upward is returned.

Several experiments with ADSL to real users began in 1996. In 1998, wide-scale installations began in several parts of the U.S. In 2000 and beyond, ADSL and other forms of DSL are expected to become generally available in urban areas. With ADSL (and other forms of DSL), telephone companies are competing with cable companies and their cable modem services.
Related Keywords (ex: ADSL Annex, ADSL Card, etc)
annex
broadband
cable
card
channel
digital
discs
ethernet
gateway
ima
interface
isdn
lan
line
modem
module
network
over
port
pots
power
router
service
side
smartnet
splitter
term
unit
wan
wireless

 

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