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IGS Highspeed DSL | |
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What is DSL?
Digital Subscriber Line (DSL) technology uses existing copper
telephone wiring to deliver high-speed data services to businesses and homes. In its
various forms - including ADSL, HDSL, IDSL, R-ADSL, SDSL, and VDSL - DSL offers users a
choice of speeds ranging from 32 Kbps to, in laboratory settings, more than 50 Mbps. These
digital services will ultimately be used to deliver bandwidth-intensive applications like
video on demand and distance learning. More immediately, today DSL is for the first time
putting high-speed Internet access within the reach of small and medium-size businesses.
DSL takes existing voice cables that connect customer premises to the phone company's
central office (CO) and turns them into a high-speed digital link. Over any given link,
the maximum DSL speed is determined by the distance between the customer site and the CO.
At the customer premises, a DSL modem connects the phone line to either a standalone
computer or a local-area network (LAN). This DSL equipment differs from other Internet
access devices in two key respects: It requires no end-user configuration, and it is not a
dial-up solution.
Why is DSL better?
DSL technologies are revolutionizing business communications by
providing high-speed Internet access at prices that small and medium-size businesses can
afford. Before the advent of DSL, these companies had to choose between cheap but
agonizingly slow dial-up modems and fast but prohibitively expensive ISDN services or
leased lines. DSL changes the economics of Internet access by establishing an entirely new
point on the price/performance curve.
DSL services also offer small and medium-size businesses significantly higher Internet
access for only incrementally higher prices. This conveys a number of compelling
advantages to users:
© 2006 IGS Hawkesbury
Internet Service Provider