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HIGH SPEED COMMUNICATION VIA COPPER WIRE

ISDN (Integrated Services Digital Network):  

ISDN allows one to make end-to-end digital connections that can support a wide variety of services, such as speech, video conferencing, fax, data and image transfer, internet and e-mail.  Connection times are approximately 2 seconds with access speeds of up to 128Kbps (Basic Rate ISDN) and 1984Kbps (Primary Rate ISDN / Two Meg Link).  The ISDN service can be installed on the same copper which houses your present analogue line, if need be.  Standard analogue modems reserve some of their bandwidth for error detection, correction and re-transmission, whereas ISDN utilises its' bandwidth to the fullest, because the data is digitally pure and has no need for error correction.  It is possible to attain speeds of up to 512Kbps on a 128Kbps connection owing to the fact that the adaptor does not have to adapt to line conditions, as a standard modem might have had to.  Calls on the ISDN lines are charged at standard Telkom rates.  ISDN lines are apparently used in most, if not all, homes in countries like Germany and Switzerland.

 

Basic Rate Access:  Basic Rate Access is the option that most households and SME's (Small to Medium Enterprises) would utilise.  The line is terminated at an NT (Network Terminator) which is powered by the AC power supply.  The two most common NT's are the NT1 and the NT2a;  The NT1 has an ISDN line-in socket (RJ11) and one ISDN line-out socket (RJ45), whereas the NT2a has a line-in socket and two ISDN line-out sockets (RJ45) and two "Analogue" line-out sockets (RJ11) for standard telephones.  Both forms of ISDN lines allow for Direct dialling outwards and direct dialling inwards (DDO/DDI).  Translated, this means that one can make or receive at least two calls at the same time, "technically" via the same line.  Coupled with a business voice system, or PABX, it also allows an outsider to dial directly to a particular extension, if the appropriate digit translations, or DDI Alpha tags, have been put into place. A Basic Rate ISDN line actually carries 160Kbps, consisting of two (64Kbps B-channels and 16Kbps D-channels), where the B-channels are for data and the D-channels are for signalling (call control).  The D-channel is used for certain data too, for example credit card security.  There is an approximate waiting period of two weeks for a Basic Rate installation.

 

Primary Rate Access:  Also known as a Two Meg Link, primary rate access houses 30 B-channels and 2 D-channels, allowing 30 calls to be made or received at the same time.  Primary rate is obviously more costly to install and maintain and usually requires a two year contract to be signed by the applicant.  It is most useful for larger businesses or for people requiring large amounts of bandwidth.  Primary Rate ISDN "technically" runs at data transfer speeds of 2000Kbps or 2Mbps.  It effectively runs at 1984Kbps due to the D-channel being reserved for signalling.   Due to the high costs of Primary rate, I will deal more thoroughly with it at a later stage.

 

(DSL) Digital Subscriber Line:  

 

DSL is used for high speed connectivity via the same copper that is used in our (South African) telephone networks.  In order to utilise DSL, one needs to install a DSL "modem" or router at one's home or office and one also requires the telephone company to install a DSLAM (DSL Access Multiplexer) in the relevant exchange.  The DSLAM effectively concentrates data from several DSL subscribers into one high speed signal directly to the ISP's (Internet Service Provider) network.  

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 (1.5 Mps vs. 56 kps) 
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. 


The pair of copper wires, which are used for your home phone, have lots of room for carrying more than your phone conversations. The wires are capable of handling a much greater bandwidth, the 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, or cycles per second. 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 from one line causing problems on another. Modern equipment that sends digital, rather than analog, data can safely use much more of the telephone line's capacity. DSL does just that. 

DSL Variations:
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. 
Most home and small business users are connected to an Asymmetrical 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 3-4 times faster than the connection from the user back to the Internet, then the user will see the most benefit, most of the time. 

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 the potential for seeing very high speeds in the future. For example, 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 64-640 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: 

The presence of "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. 


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 or CAP, system, which was used on many of the early installations of ADSL. 





CAP operates by dividing the signals on the telephone line into three distinct bands: Voice conversations are carried in the 0-4 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 25-160 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. 





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. 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 equivilent 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. 





CAP and DMT are similar in one way that you can see as a DSL user. 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 filters are built to block everything above 4 khz, preventing the data signals from interfering with standard telephone calls. 

DSL Info was gratefully retrieved from www.howstuffworks.com

 

POINTS TO PONDER WHEN PURCHASING A NEW P.C.

   

Buy the top of the range processor as the new software will require bigger and better software and having bought a mediocre processor from the outset, you may not be able to use the latest software.

Beginners who think that they only want to do word processing and e-mail soon become more familiar and therefore more adventurous with their new P.C.s and often wish that they had bought a higher level P.C.

If you insist on the quality of an Intel Chipset, consider the Intel Celeron as the “Biggest Bang For Your Buck”.

Shop around for quotes, but remember to consider the after-sale service and support from the relevant dealer.  Perhaps they offer free telephonic support for common questions.  Home P.C. users are most active on weekends, is your dealer available on weekends, if you have a problem?

 

Entrepreneurship:

John Chambers, CEO and President of Cisco Systems, recently wrote an article, which was published in the E-Business Annual (Intelligence Magazine).  Within the article, he deliberated on the Internet Economy and went on to explain five global trends that we can expect over the next five years, namely Free Voice Calls, Globalization of Businesses and People, Educational changes via Internet education, Inter-connectivity of all electronic equipment and the key to success will become, if it isn't already, the Internet.

Michael Dell, CEO of Dell Computer Corporation, speaking on "Harnessing the Power of the Internet" in the same publication, expanded on methods of harnessing this infinite power through Velocity, Efficiency in Execution, and Superior Online Experience.

Velocity, contextualised, being business velocity by shrinking time and distance directionally, both across the supply chain and then to your customers.  Furthermore, reduction of time, inventory, physical materials and assets can drive a tremendous improvement in business efficiency.  He went on to support the fact that with greater efficiency, the company is able to better meet the needs of it's clients.

Efficiency in execution ranks with products and services when it comes to success on the internet, according to Michael Dell.  According to Dell, service efficiency is ... about compressing time for resolution while lowering the cost to the customers and to the company.

Superior online experience is the final rule for internet revolutionaries, according to Dell.  The online experience must be better than any experience in the physical world.  This ensures sustainable advantages and relationships, that breed loyalty with time. 

 

Finally, Thomas Siebel, CEO and Chairman of Seibel Systems, maintains that many pipedreams, regarding the internet, have failed (many dreams have come true too Ed.) and builds on that by saying that the challenge is long term.  If you are thinking of entering E-Business, expect things to move fast, but do not expect instant profits.

 

More on this and similar subjects next month.

 

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