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Digital Subscriber Line, or DSL, is a
technology for bringing high-bandwidth connectivity to homes and small
businesses over ordinary copper telephone lines just like the ones already
installed in your home or office. xDSL refers to the family of digital
subscriber line technologies, such as ADSL, SDSL, HDSL, and RADSL. Connection
speeds for DSL range from 2048 Mbps to 128 Kbps. DSL achieves higher
data transfer rates by utilizing more of the available bandwidth spectrum.
Ordinary telephone service only makes use of the 0 – 3400 Hz frequency range,
which accounts for the 56 Kbps speed limit on standard analog modems. DSL eludes
the 3400 Hz frequency boundary by outmoding the digital-to-analog conversion
that modems perform and connecting both ends digitally. Hence, larger bandwidth
is available, allowing higher transfer rates.
DSL's use of the existing twisted pair
infrastructure makes it cheaper to install than other services which require
additional cable to be laid. And unlike cable modems, DSL is not a bus
technology, so the bandwidth available to the end user is more consistent.
However, despite all of its positive attributes, DSL is not without flaw. For
instance, in order to be eligible for DSL, the end user must be geographically
within a certain distance from the central telephone office or switch, otherwise
the signal degradation is too great and DSL is unfeasible (for ADSL that
distance is two miles.) In addition, numerous standards still exist for DSL,
hardware is still comparatively pricey, and service is available only in limited
areas. Despite these drawbacks, DSL is still a faster alternative to analog
modems and ISDN, and should rival cable modems as far as actual bandwidth
offerings.
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