When you connect to the
Internet, you might connect through a regular modem,
through a local-area
network connection in your office, through a cable
modem or through a digital subscriber line (DSL)
connection. DSL is a very high-speed connection that uses the
same wires as a regular telephone
line.
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Here
are some advantages of DSL:
You
can leave your Internet connection open and still use the
phone line for voice calls.
The
speed is much higher than a regular modem
DSL
doesn't necessarily require new wiring; it can use the phone
line you already have.
The
company that offers DSL will usually provide the modem as part
of the installation.
But
there are disadvantages:
A
DSL connection works better when you are closer to the
provider's central office.
The
connection is faster for receiving data than it is for sending
data over the Internet.
The
service is not available everywhere.
In
this article, we explain how a DSL connection manages to
squeeze more information through a standard phone line -- and
lets you make regular telephone calls even when you're online.
Telephone
Lines If you have read How
Telephones Work, then you know that a standard telephone
installation in the United States consists of a pair of copper
wires that the phone company installs in your home. The copper
wires have lots of room for carrying more than your phone
conversations -- they are capable of handling a much greater
bandwidth, or range of frequencies, than that demanded
for voice. DSL exploits this "extra capacity" to
carry information on the wire without disturbing the line's
ability to carry conversations. The entire plan is based on
matching particular frequencies to specific tasks.
To understand DSL, you
first need to know a couple of things about a normal telephone
line -- the kind that telephone professionals call POTS,
for Plain Old Telephone Service. One of the ways that POTS
makes the most of the telephone company's wires and equipment
is by limiting the frequencies that the switches, telephones
and other equipment will carry. Human voices, speaking in
normal conversational tones, can be carried in a frequency
range of 0 to 3,400 Hertz (cycles per second -- see How
Telephones Work for a great demonstration of this). This
range of frequencies is tiny. For example, compare this to the
range of most stereo speakers,
which cover from roughly 20 Hertz to 20,000 Hertz. And the
wires themselves have the potential to handle frequencies up to
several million Hertz in most cases.
The
use of such a small portion of the wire's total bandwidth is
historical -- remember that the telephone system has been in
place, using a pair of copper wires to each home, for about a
century. By limiting the frequencies carried over the lines,
the telephone system can pack lots of wires into a very small
space without worrying about interference between lines. Modern
equipment that sends digital rather than analog data can safely
use much more of the telephone line's capacity. DSL does just
that.
Asymmetrical
DSL Most homes and small business users are
connected to an asymmetric DSL (ADSL) line. ADSL divides
up the available frequencies in a line on the assumption that
most Internet users look at, or download, much more information
than they send, or upload. Under this assumption, if the
connection speed from the Internet to the user is three to four
times faster than the connection from the user back to the
Internet, then the user will see the most benefit (most of the
time).
Other
types of DSL include:
Very high
bit-rate DSL (VDSL)
- This is a fast connection, but works only over a short
distance.
Symmetric
DSL (SDSL) - This connection, used mainly by small
businesses, doesn't allow you to use the phone at the same
time, but the speed of receiving and sending data is the same.
Rate-adaptive
DSL (RADSL) - This is a variation of ADSL, but the modem
can adjust the speed of the connection depending on the length
and quality of the line.
Distance
Limitations Precisely how much benefit you see
will greatly depend on how far you are from the central office
of the company providing the ADSL service. ADSL is a
distance-sensitive technology: As the connection's
length increases, the signal quality decreases and the
connection speed goes down. The limit for ADSL service is
18,000 feet (5,460 meters), though for speed and quality
of service reasons many ADSL providers place a lower limit on
the distances for the service. At the extremes of the distance
limits, ADSL customers may see speeds far below the promised
maximums, while customers nearer the central office have faster
connections and may see extremely high speeds in the future.
ADSL technology can provide maximum downstream (Internet to
customer) speeds of up to 8 megabits per second (Mbps) at a
distance of about 6,000 feet (1,820 meters), and upstream
speeds of up to 640 kilobits per second (Kbps). In practice,
the best speeds widely offered today are 1.5 Mbps downstream,
with upstream speeds varying between 64 and 640 Kbps.
You
might wonder, if distance is a limitation for DSL, why it's not
also a limitation for voice telephone calls. The answer lies in
small amplifiers called loading coils that the telephone
company uses to boost voice signals. Unfortunately, these
loading coils are incompatible with ADSL signals, so a voice
coil in the loop between your telephone and the telephone
company's central office will disqualify you from receiving
ADSL. Other factors that might disqualify you from receiving
ADSL include:
Bridge
taps - These are extensions, between you and the central
office, that extend service to other customers. While you
wouldn't notice these bridge taps in normal phone service,
they may take the total length of the circuit beyond the
distance limits of the service provider.
Fiber-optic
cables - ADSL signals can't pass through the
conversion from analog to digital and back to analog that
occurs if a portion of your telephone circuit comes through
fiber-optic cables.
Distance
- Even if you know where your central office is (don't be
surprised if you don't -- the telephone companies don't
advertise their locations), looking at a map is no indication
of the distance a signal must travel between your house and
the office.
Splitting
the Signal: CAP There are two competing and
incompatible standards for ADSL. The official ANSI
standard for ADSL is a system called discrete multitone,
or DMT. According to equipment manufacturers, most of the ADSL
equipment installed today uses DMT. An earlier and more easily
implemented standard was the carrierless amplitude/phase
(CAP) system, which was used on many of the early installations
of ADSL.
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CAP
operates by dividing the signals on the telephone line into
three distinct bands: Voice conversations are carried in the 0
to 4 KHz (kilohertz) band, as they are in all POTS circuits.
The upstream channel (from the user back to the server) is
carried in a band between 25 and 160 KHz. The downstream
channel (from the server to the user) begins at 240 KHz and
goes up to a point that varies depending on a number of
conditions (line length, line noise, number of users in a
particular telephone company switch) but has a maximum of about
1.5 MHz (megahertz). This system, with the three channels
widely separated, minimizes the possibility of interference
between the channels on one line, or between the signals on
different lines.
Splitting
the Signal: DMT DMT also divides signals into
separate channels, but doesn't use two fairly broad channels
for upstream and downstream data. Instead, DMT divides the data
into 247 separate channels, each 4 KHz wide.
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One
way to think about it is to imagine that the phone company
divides your copper line into 247 different 4-KHz lines and
then attaches a modem to each one. You get the equivalent of
247 modems connected to your computer at once! Each channel is
monitored and, if the quality is too impaired, the signal is
shifted to another channel. This system constantly shifts
signals between different channels, searching for the best
channels for transmission and reception. In addition, some of
the lower channels (those starting at about 8 KHz), are used as
bidirectional channels, for upstream and downstream
information. Monitoring and sorting out the information on the
bidirectional channels, and keeping up with the quality of all
247 channels, makes DMT more complex to implement than CAP, but
gives it more flexibility on lines of differing quality.
Splitting
the Signal: Filters CAP and DMT are similar in
one way that you can see as a DSL user.
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If
you have ADSL installed, you were almost certainly given small
filters to attach to the outlets that don't provide the signal
to your ADSL modem. These filters are low-pass filters
-- simple filters that block all signals above a certain
frequency. Since all voice conversations take place below 4
KHz, the low-pass (LP) filters are built to block everything
above 4 KHz, preventing the data signals from interfering with
standard telephone calls.
DSL
Equipment ADSL uses two pieces of equipment,
one on the customer end and one at the Internet service
provider, telephone company or other provider of DSL services.
At the customer's location there is a DSL transceiver,
which may also provide other services. The DSL service provider
has a DSL Access Multiplexer (DSLAM) to receive customer
connections.
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In
the next couple of sections, we'll take a look at these two
pieces of equipment.
DSL
Equipment: Transceiver Most residential
customers call their DSL transceiver a "DSL modem."
The engineers at the telephone company or ISP call it an ATU-R.
Regardless of what it's called, it's the point where data from
the user's computer or network is connected to the DSL line.
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Photo
courtesy Allied
Telesyn DSL modem
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The transceiver can
connect to a customer's equipment in several ways, though most
residential installation uses USB
or 10 base-T Ethernet
connections. While most of the ADSL transceivers sold by ISPs
and telephone companies are simply transceivers, the devices
used by businesses may combine network routers,
network switches
or other networking equipment in the same platform.
DSL
Equipment: DSLAM The DSLAM at the access
provider is the equipment that really allows DSL to happen. A
DSLAM takes connections from many customers and aggregates them
onto a single, high-capacity connection to the Internet. DSLAMs
are generally flexible and able to support multiple types of
DSL in a single central office, and different varieties of
protocol and modulation -- both CAP and DMT, for example -- in
the same type of DSL. In addition, the DSLAM may provide
additional functions including routing or dynamic IP
address assignment for the customers.
The DSLAM provides one
of the main differences between user service through ADSL and
through cable
modems. Because cable-modem users generally share a network
loop that runs through a neighborhood, adding users means
lowering performance in many instances. ADSL provides a
dedicated connection from each user back to the DSLAM, meaning
that users won't see a performance decrease as new users are
added -- until the total number of users begins to saturate the
single, high-speed connection to the Internet. At that point,
an upgrade by the service provider can provide additional
performance for all the users connected to the DSLAM.
For information on ADSL
rates and availability in the United States, go to Broadband
Reports. This site can provide information on ADSL service
companies in your area, the rates they charge, and customer
satisfaction, as well as estimating how far you are from the
nearest central office.
For
more information on DSL and related topics, check out the links
on the next page.
Lots
More Information
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