By
Capt. Hani Alsohaibi, SOFAB Telecom
The Fastest
Data Transfer Rate in World on a Worldwide
Grid Infrastructure:
On 15 February 2009 the Worldwide LHC Computing
Grid collaboration (WLCG) officially announced
the successful completion of a service challenge
at the Computing for High Energy and Nuclear
Physics 2006 conference (CHEP'06) in Mumbai,
India. The challenge involved sustaining
a continuous flow of physics data on a worldwide
Grid infrastructure at up to 1 GB/s.
The maximum sustained data rates achieved
correspond to transferring a DVD of scientific
data from CERN every five seconds.
Names of
Sizes of Storage Data:
| bit |
bit |
| Byte |
Byte |
| KB |
Kilo Byte |
| MB |
Mega Byte |
| GB |
Giga Byte |
| TB |
Tera Byte |
| PB |
Peta Byte |
Measurements of
Data Transfer Rates:
| Bps |
Bytes per second |
| KBps |
Kilo Bytes per second |
| MBps |
Mega Bytes per second |
| GBps |
Giga Bytes per second |
Measurements of Data:
| 1 Byte |
= 8 bits |
|
|
|
| 1 KB |
= 1000 Bytes |
= 8000 bits |
|
|
| 1 MB |
= 1000 KB |
= 1000,000 Bytes |
|
|
| 1 GB |
= 1000 MB |
= 1000,000 KB |
= 1000,000,000 Bytes
|
|
| 1 TB |
= 1000 GB |
=1000,000 MB |
= 1000,000,000 KB |
= 1000,000,000,000 Bytes |
| 1 PB |
= 1000 TB |
= 1000,000 GB |
= 1000,000,000 MB |
= 1000,000,000,000
KB |
| |
= 1000
,000,000,000,000 Bytes |
|
|
Transfer Data Rate is based on
the Following Units:
| bits |
Bytes |
Kilo
Bytes |
Mega Bytes |
Giga
Bytes |
A lowercase "b"
usually means a bit, while an uppercase
"B" represents a byte.
Transfer Rate:
| Bps: |
Byte per second |
| kBps: |
Kilo Byte per second |
| mBps: |
Mega Byte per second |
| gBps: |
Giga Byte per second |
KBPS
(Kilo Byte/Second) |
Service
Application |
Level
of Service |
KBPS
(Kilo Byte/Second) |
50
kBps |
Home Internet Service |
Unprofessional
Internet Service |
100
kBps |
Home Internet Service |
Unprofessional
Internet Service |
250
kBps |
Home Internet Service |
Unprofessional
Internet Service |
500
kBps |
Home Internet Service |
Unprofessional
Internet Service |
MBPS
(Mega Byte Per Second) |
1
mBps |
Office Internet Service |
Semi
Professional Internet Service |
2
mBps |
Office Internet Service |
Semi
Professional Internet Service |
5
mBps |
Office Internet Service |
Professional
Internet Service |
10
mBps |
Office Internet Service |
Very
Professional Internet Service |
100
mBps |
Low Speed Office LAN |
Non
Professional Office LAN Infrastructure |
GBPS
(Giga Byte Per Second) |
1
gBps |
High Speed Office
LAN |
Professional
Office LAN Infrastructure |
1
gBps |
Fiber Optic LAN |
Semi
Professional Government LAN |
8
gBps |
Fiber Optic LAN |
Professional
Government LAN |
10
gBps |
Fiber Optic LAN |
Very
Professional Government LAN |
20
gBps |
Fiber Optic LAN |
Optimum
Professional Government LAN |
30
gBps |
Fiber Optic LAN |
Ultimate
Professional Government LAN |
Measurements
of Data Speed:
Today there are generally 2 ways of describing
data transfer speeds: in bits per second,
or in Bytes per second. As explained above,
a Byte is made of 8 bits. Network engineers
still describe network speeds (LAN Local
Area Networks) in Bytes per second. This
also describes Upload/Download Internet
Speeds.
A lowercase "b"
usually means a bit, while an uppercase
"B" represents a byte.
Names for Different Sizes of Data:
| Bit |
A bit is simply
a 1 or a 0. It is the most basic unit
of data in a computer. It's like the
dots and dashes in Morse code for a
computer. It's also called machine language.
Example “0” or “1” |
| Byte |
In computer
science a byte is a unit of measurement
of information storage, that equals
'8 bits', can be used to represent letters
and numbers. For example, the number
01000001 is 8 bits long, and represents
the letter A in ASCII. |
| KB |
A KB is a unit
of data that equals 1024 bytes. This
is because 8 bytes cannot contribute
into 1000. |
| MB |
Megabyte is 1024kB squared, 10242 |
| GB |
A gigabyte is
a unit of data storage worth a billion
bytes meaning either exactly 1 billion
bytes (10243) or approximately 1.07
billion bytes. More often than not in
advertising, Gigabytes are presented
as 1 billion bytes and not 10243 (read
the fine print in your adverts!). This
explains why a freshly formatted 500GB
hard drive shows up at a 450GB one instead.
Not too long ago many people were discussing
storage in Megabytes. These days, storage
has become so cheap that having Gigabytes
is considered the norm. |
| TB |
A terabyte is
10244 and is defined as about one trillion
bytes, or 1024 gigabytes. Data centres
such as those operated by Google handle
thousands if not millions of terabytes
of data each day. As storage becomes
cheaper and faster, terabytes are becoming
a commonly heard term. |
| PB |
A petabytes, its the largest unit
of storage data capacity. |
Names for Different Transfer Sizes
of Data:
| Kilobyte
per second |
A kilobyte per
second (KB/s
or KBps) is a unit
of data transfer rate equal to:
8,000 bits per second, or
1,000 bytes per second, or
8 kilobits per second. |
Megabyte per
second |
A megabyte per second
(MB/s or MBps)
is a unit of data transfer rate equal
to:
8,000,000 bits per second, or
1,000,000 bytes per second, or
1,000 kilobytes per second, or
8 megabits per second. |
| Gigabyte per
second |
A gigabyte per second
(GB/s or GBps)
is a unit of data transfer rate equal
to:
8,000,000,000 bits per second, or
1,000,000,000 bytes per second, or
1,000,000 kilobytes per second, or
1,000 megabytes per second, or
8 gigabits per second. |
| Terabyte per
second: |
A terabyte per second
(TB/s or TBps)
is a unit of data transfer rate equal
to:
8,000,000,000,000 bits per second, or
1,000,000,000,000 bytes per second,
or
1,000,000,000 kilobytes per second,
or
1,000,000 megabytes per second, or
1,000 gigabytes per second, or
8 terabits per second. |
Conversion Formulas:
| Name |
Symbol |
bit per second |
byte
per second |
bit
per second (formula) |
byte
per second (formula) |
bit per second |
bit/s |
1 |
0.125 |
1 |
1/8
|
byte per second |
B/s |
8 |
1 |
8 |
1
|
kilobit per second |
kbit/s |
1,000 |
125 |
10^3 |
10^3/8
|
kibibit per second |
Kibit/s |
1,024 |
128 |
2^10 |
2^7
|
kilobyte per second |
kB/s |
8,000 |
1,000 |
8*10^3 |
10^3
|
kibibyte per second |
KiB/s |
8,192 |
1,024 |
2^13 |
2^10
|
megabit per second |
Mbit/s |
1,000,000 |
125,000 |
10^6 |
10^6/8
|
mebibit per second |
Mibit/s |
1,048,576 |
131,072 |
2^20 |
2^17
|
megabyte per second |
MB/s |
8,000,000 |
1,000,000 |
8*10^6 |
10^6
|
mebibyte per second |
MiB/s |
8,388,608 |
1,048,576 |
2^23 |
2^20
|
gigabit per second |
Gbit/s |
1,000,000,000 |
125,000,000 |
10^9 |
10^9/8
|
gibibit per second |
Gibit/s |
1,073,741,824 |
134,217,728 |
2^30 |
2^27
|
gigabyte per second |
GB/s |
8,000,000,000 |
1,000,000,000
|
8*10^9 |
10^9
|
gibibyte per second |
GiB/s |
8,589,934,592 |
1,073,741,824
|
2^33 |
2^30
|
terabit per second |
Tbit/s |
1,000,000,000,000 |
125,000,000,000
|
10^12 |
10^12/8
|
tebibit per second |
Tibit/s |
1,099,511,627,776 |
137,438,953,472
|
2^40 |
2^37
|
terabyte per second |
TB/s |
8,000,000,000,000 |
1,000,000,000,000
|
8*10^12 |
10^12
|
tebibyte per second |
TiB/s |
8,796,093,022,208 |
1,099,511,627,776
|
2^43 |
2^40
|
Examples:
| Quantity |
Unit |
bits per second |
bytes per second |
Field |
Description |
56 |
kbit/s |
56,000 |
7,000 |
Networking |
56k modem - 56
kb/s - 56,000 b/s |
64 |
kbit/s |
64,000 |
8,000 |
Networking |
64k ISDN - 64 kb/s - 64,000 b/s
|
1536 |
kbit/s |
1,536,000 |
192,000 |
Networking |
1536k T1 - 1,536,000
b/s (1.536 Mb/s) |
1 |
Gbit/s |
1,000,000,000 |
125,000,000 |
Networking |
Gigabit Ethernet |
10 |
Gbit/s |
10,000,000,000
|
1,250,000,000
|
Networking |
10 Gigabit Ethernet |
1 |
Tbit/s |
1,000,000,000,000 |
125,000,000,000 |
Networking |
SEA-ME-WE 4 submarine cable - 1.28
terabits per second [1] |
4 |
kbit/s |
4,000 |
500 |
Audio data |
minimum achieved
for encoding recognizable speech (using
special-purpose speech codecs) |
8 |
kbit/s |
8,000 |
1,000 |
Audio data |
telephone quality |
32 |
kbit/s |
32,000 |
4,000 |
Audio data |
MW quality |
128 |
kbit/s |
128,000 |
16,000 |
Audio data |
128 kb/s MP3 - 128,000 b/s |
192 |
kbit/s |
192,000 |
24,000 |
Audio data |
Nearly CD quality
for a file compressed in the MP3 format
|
1,411.2 |
kbit/s |
1,411,200 |
176,400 |
Audio data |
CD audio (uncompressed, 16 bit
samples × 44.1 kHz × 2 channels) |
2 |
Mbit/s |
2,000,000 |
250,000 |
Video data |
VHS quality |
8 |
Mbit/s |
8,000,000 |
1,000,000 |
Video data |
DVD quality |
27 |
Mbit/s |
27,000,000 |
3,375,000 |
Video data |
HDTV quality
|
1.244 |
Gbit/s |
1,244,000,000 |
155,500,000 |
Networking |
OC-24, a 1.244 Gb/s SONET data
channel |
9.953 |
Gbit/s |
9,953,000,000
|
1,244,125,000
|
Networking |
OC-192, a 9.953
Gb/s SONET data channel |
39.813 |
Gbit/s |
39,813,000,000 |
4,976,625,000 |
Networking |
OC-768, a 39.813 Gb/s SONET data
channel, the fastest in current use
|
60 |
MB/s |
480,000,000 |
60,000,000 |
Computer data
interfaces |
USB 2.0 |
625 |
MB/s |
5,000,000,000 |
625,000,000 |
Computer data interfaces |
USB 3.0 |
98.3 |
MB/s |
786,432,000 |
98,304,000 |
Computer data
interfaces |
FireWire IEEE
1394b-2002 S800 |
120 |
MB/s |
960,000,000 |
120,000,000 |
Computer data interfaces |
Harddrive read, Samsung SpinPoint
F1 HD103Uj [1] |
133 |
MB/s |
1,064,000,000
|
133,000,000 |
Computer data
interfaces |
PATA 33 - 133
MB/s |
150 |
MB/s |
1,200,000,000 |
150,000,000 |
Computer data interfaces |
SATA 1.5Gb/s - First generation
|
300 |
MB/s |
2,400,000,000
|
300,000,000 |
Computer data
interfaces |
SATA 3Gb/s -
Second generation |
600 |
MB/s |
4,800,000,000 |
600,000,000 |
Computer data interfaces |
SATA 6Gb/s - Third generation |
533 |
MB/s |
4,264,000,000
|
533,000,000 |
Computer data
interfaces |
PCI 133 - 533
MB/s |
About Bandwidth:
Internet bandwidth is, in simple terms,
the transmission speed or throughput of
your connection to the Internet. However,
measuring bandwidth can be tricky, since
the lowest bandwidth point between your
computer and the site you're looking at
determines the effective transmission speed
at any moment.
- Three factors outside of your computer
control how quickly you can view Web pages:
- The Internet bandwidth between your
computer and the site you're viewing.
- The round-trip time between your computer
and the site you're viewing.
- The response time of the site you're
viewing.
Speed
Test Thermometer |
Off
the chart! |
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T-2
|
2Mbps
|
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1.5Mbps
|
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T-1
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1Mbps
|
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500Kbps
|
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200Kbps
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100Kbps
|
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ISDN
|
60Kbps
|
-
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-
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-
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ISDN
|
40Kbps
|
-
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-
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56K
|
20Kbps
|
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Telephone
Company Broadband Transmission
Rates |
Connection |
Transmission
Data Rate |
DS-1 (Tier 1) |
1.544 Mbit/s |
E-1 |
2.048 Mbit/s |
DS-3 (Tier 3) |
44.736 Mbit/s |
OC-3 |
155.52 Mbit/s |
OC-12 |
622.08 Mbit/s |
OC-48 |
2.488 Gbit/s |
OC-192 |
9.953 Gbit/s |
OC-768 |
39.813 Gbit/s |
OC-1536 |
79.6 Gbit/s |
OC-3072 |
159.2 Gbit/s |
|
To test your internet speed, click
here.
Broadband
World:
Broadband is often called "high-speed"
Internet, because it usually has a high
rate of data transmission. In general, any
connection to the customer of 256 kbit/s
(0.256 Mbit/s) or greater is more concisely
considered broadband Internet. The International
Telecommunication Union Standardization
Sector (ITU-T) recommendation I.113 has
defined broadband as a transmission capacity
that is faster than primary rate ISDN, at
1.5 to 2 Mbit/s. The FCC definition of broadband
is 768 kbit/s (0.8 Mbit/s). The Organization
for Economic Co-operation and Development
(OECD) has defined broadband as 256 kbit/s
in at least one direction and this bit rate
is the most common baseline that is marketed
as "broadband" around the world.
There is no specific bitrate defined by
the industry, however, and "broadband"
can mean lower-bitrate transmission methods.
Some Internet Service Providers (ISPs) use
this to their advantage in marketing lower-bitrate
connections as broadband.
In practice, the
advertised bandwidth is not always reliably
available to the customer; ISPs often allow
a greater number of subscribers than their
backbone connection or neighborhood access
network can handle, under the assumption
that most users will not be using their
full connection capacity very frequently.
This aggregation strategy works more often
than not, so users can typically burst to
their full bandwidth most of the time; however,
peer-to-peer (P2P) file sharing systems,
often requiring extended durations of high
bandwidth, stress these assumptions, and
can cause major problems for ISPs who have
excessively overbooked their capacity. For
more on this topic, see traffic shaping.
As takeup for these introductory products
increases, telcos are starting to offer
higher bit rate services. For existing connections,
this most of the time simply involves reconfiguring
the existing equipment at each end of the
connection.
As the bandwidth
delivered to end users increases, the market
expects that video on demand services streamed
over the Internet will become more popular,
though at the present time such services
generally require specialized networks.
The data rates on most broadband services
still do not suffice to provide good quality
video, as MPEG-2 video requires about 6
Mbit/s for good results. Adequate video
for some purposes becomes possible at lower
data rates, with rates of 768 kbit/s and
384 kbit/s used for some video conferencing
applications, and rates as low as 100 kbit/s
used for videophones using H.264/MPEG-4
AVC. The MPEG-4 format delivers high-quality
video at 2 Mbit/s, at the low end of cable
modem and ADSL performance.
Increased bandwidth
has already made an impact on newsgroups:
postings to groups such as alt.binaries.*
have grown from JPEG files to entire CD
and DVD images. According to NTL, the level
of traffic on their network increased from
a daily inbound news feed of 150 gigabytes
of data per day and 1 terabyte of data out
each day in 2001 to 500 gigabytes of data
inbound and over 4 terabytes out each day
in 2002.[citation
Technology:
The standard broadband technologies in most
areas are DSL and cable modems. Newer technologies
in use include VDSL and pushing optical
fiber connections closer to the subscriber
in both telephone and cable plants. Fiber-optic
communication, while only recently being
used in fiber to the premises and fiber
to the curb schemes, has played a crucial
role in enabling Broadband Internet access
by making transmission of information over
larger distances much more cost-effective
than copper wire technology. In a few areas
not served by cable or ADSL, community organizations
have begun to install Wi-Fi networks, and
in some cities and towns local governments
are installing municipal Wi-Fi networks.
As of 2006, broadband mobile Internet access
has become available at the consumer level
in some countries, using the HSDPA and EV-DO
technologies. The newest technology being
deployed for mobile and stationary broadband
access is WiMAX.
DSL (ADSL/SDSL):
Main article: Asymmetric digital subscriber
line
Multilinking Modems
Roughly double the dial-up rate can be achieved
with multilinking technology. What is required
are two modems, two phone lines, two dial-up
accounts, and ISP support for multilinking,
or special software at the user end. This
inverse multiplexing option was popular
with some high-end users before ISDN, DSL
and other technologies became available.
Diamond and other vendors had created dual
phone line modems with bonding capability.
The data rate of dual line modems is faster
than 90 kbit/s. The Internet and phone charge
will be twice the ordinary dial-up charge.
Load balancing takes two Internet connections
and feeds them into your network as one
double data rate, more resilient Internet
connection. By choosing two independent
Internet providers the load balancing hardware
will automatically use the line with least
load which means should one line fail, the
second one automatically takes up the slack.
ISDN:
Integrated Service Digital Network (ISDN)
is one of the oldest broadband digital access
methods for consumers and businesses to
connect to the Internet. It is a telephone
data service standard. Its use in the United
States peaked in the late 1990s prior to
the availability of DSL and cable modem
technologies. Broadband service is usually
compared to ISDN-BRI because this was the
standard broadband access technology that
formed a baseline for the challenges faced
by the early broadband providers. These
providers sought to compete against ISDN
by offering faster and cheaper services
to consumers.
A basic rate ISDN line (known as ISDN-BRI)
is an ISDN line with 2 data "bearer"
channels (DS0 - 64 kbit/s each). Using ISDN
terminal adapters (erroneously called modems),
it is possible to bond together 2 or more
separate ISDN-BRI lines to reach bandwidths
of 256 kbit/s or more. The ISDN channel
bonding technology has been used for video
conference applications and broadband data
transmission.
Primary rate ISDN, known as ISDN-PRI, is
an ISDN line with 23 DS0 channels and total
bandwidth of 1,544 kbit/s (US standard).
ISDN E1 (European standard) line is an ISDN
lines with 30 DS0 channels and total bandwidth
of 2,048 kbit/s. Because ISDN is a telephone-based
product, a lot of the terminology and physical
aspects of the line are shared by the ISDN-PRI
used for voice services. An ISDN line can
therefore be "provisioned" for
voice or data and many different options,
depending on the equipment being used at
any particular installation, and depending
on the offerings of the telephone company's
central office switch. Most ISDN-PRI's are
used for telephone voice communication using
large PBX systems, rather than for data.
One obvious exception is that ISPs usually
have ISDN-PRI's for handling ISDN data and
modem calls.
It is mainly of historical interest that
many of the earlier ISDN data lines used
56 kbit/s rather than 64 kbit/s "B"
channels of data. This caused ISDN-BRI to
be offered at both 128 kbit/s and 112 kbit/s
rates, depending on the central office's
switching equipment.
Advantages:
- Constant data rate at 64 kbit/s for
each DS0 channel.
- Two way broadband symmetric data transmission,
unlike ADSL.
- One of the data channels can be used
for phone conversation without disturbing
the data transmission through the other
data channel. When a phone call is ended,
the bearer channel can immediately dial
and re-connect itself to the data call.
- Call setup is very quick.
- Low latency
- ISDN Voice clarity is unmatched by other
phone services.
- Caller ID is almost always available
for no additional fee.
- Maximum distance from the central office
is much greater than it is for DSL.
- When using ISDN-BRI, there is the possibility
of using the low-bandwidth 16 kbit/s "D"
channel for packet data and for always
on capabilities.
Disadvantages:
- ISDN offerings are dwindling in the
marketplace due to the widespread use
of faster and cheaper alternatives.
- ISDN routers, terminal adapters ("modems"),
and telephones are more expensive than
ordinary POTS equipment, like dial-up
modems.
- ISDN provisioning can be complicated
due to the great number of options available.
- ISDN users must dial in to a provider
that offers ISDN Internet service, which
means that the call could be disconnected.
- ISDN is billed as a phone line, to which
is added the bill for Internet ISDN access.
- "Always on" data connections
are not available in all locations.
- Some telephone companies charge unusual
fees for ISDN, including call setup fees,
per minute fees, and higher rates than
normal for other services.
T-1/DS-1:
These are highly-regulated services traditionally
intended for businesses, that are managed
through Public Service Commissions (PSCs)
in each state, must be fully defined in
PSC tariff documents, and have management
rules dating back to the early 1980s which
still refer to teletypes as potential connection
devices. As such, T-1 services have very
strict and rigid service requirements which
drive up the provider's maintenance costs
and may require them to have a technician
on standby 24 hours a day to repair the
line if it malfunctions. (In comparison,
ISDN and DSL are not regulated by the PSCs
at all.) Due to the expensive and regulated
nature of T-1 lines, they are normally installed
under the provisions of a written agreement,
the contract term being typically one to
three years. However, there are usually
few restrictions to an end-user's use of
a T-1, uptime and bandwidth data rates may
be guaranteed, quality of service may be
supported, and blocks of static IP addresses
are commonly included.
Since a T-1 was originally conceived for
voice transmission, and voice T-1's are
still widely used in businesses, it can
be confusing to the uninitiated subscriber.
It is often best to refer to the type of
T-1 being considered, using the appropriate
"data" or "voice" prefix
to differentiate between the two. A voice
T-1 would terminate at a phone company's
central office (CO) for connection to the
PSTN; a data T-1 terminates at a point of
presence (POP) or data center. The T-1 line
which is between a customer's premises and
the POP or CO is called the local loop.
The owner of the local loop need not be
the owner of the network at the POP where
your T-1 connects to the Internet, and so
a T-1 subscriber may have contracts with
these two organizations separately.
The nomenclature for a T-1 varies widely,
cited in some circles a DS-1, a T1.5, a
T1, or a DS1. Some of these try to distinguish
amongst the different aspects of the line,
considering the data standard a DS-1, and
the physical structure of the trunk line
a T-1 or T-1.5. They are also called leased
lines, but that terminology is usually for
data rates under 1.5 Mbit/s. At times, a
T-1 can be included in the term "leased
line" or excluded from it. Whatever
it is called, it is inherently related to
other broadband access methods, which include
T-3, SONET OC-3, and other T-carrier and
Optical Carriers. Additionally, a T-1 might
be aggregated with more than one T-1, producing
an nxT-1, such as 4xT-1 which has exactly
4 times the bandwidth of a T-1.
When a T-1 is installed, there are a number
of choices to be made: in the carrier chosen,
the location of the demarcation point, the
type of channel service unit (CSU) or data
service unit (DSU) used, the WAN IP router
used, the types of bandwidths chosen, etc.
Specialized WAN routers are used with T-1
lines that route Internet or VPN data onto
the T-1 line from the subscriber's packet-based
(TCP/IP) network using customer premises
equipment (CPE). The CPE typical consists
of a CSU/DSU that converts the DS-1 data
stream of the T-1 to a TCP/IP packet data
stream for use in the customer's Ethernet
LAN. It is noteworthy that many T-1 providers
optionally maintain and/or sell the CPE
as part of the service contract, which can
affect the demarcation point and the ownership
of the router, CSU, or DSU.
Although a T-1 has a maximum of 1.544 Mbit/s,
a fractional T-1 might be offered which
only uses an integer multiple of 128 kbit/s
for bandwidth. In this manner, a customer
might only purchase 1/12th or 1/3 of a T-1,
which would be 128 kbit/s and 512 kbit/s,
respectively.
T-1 and fractional T-1 data lines are symmetric,
meaning that their upload and download data
rates are the same.
Wired Ethernet:
Where available, this method of broadband
connection to the Internet would indicate
that Internet access is very fast. However,
just because Ethernet is offered doesn't
mean that the full 10, 100, or 1000 Mbit/s
connection can be utilized for direct Internet
access. In a college dormitory, for example,
the 100 Mbit/s Ethernet access might be
fully available to on-campus networks, but
Internet access bandwidths might be closer
to 4xT-1 data rate (6 Mbit/s). If you are
sharing a broadband connection with others
in a building, the access bandwidth of the
leased line into the building would of course
govern the end-user's data rate.
In certain locations, however, true Ethernet
broadband access might be available. This
would most commonly be the case at a POP
or a data center, and not at a typical residence
or business. When Ethernet Internet access
is offered, it could be fiber-optic or copper
twisted pair, and the bandwidth will conform
to standard Ethernet data rates of up to
10 Gbit/s. The primary advantage is that
no special hardware is needed for Ethernet.
Ethernet also has a very low latency.
Rural broadband:
One of the great challenges of broadband
is to provide service to potential customers
in areas of low population density, such
as to farmers, ranchers, and small towns.
In cities where the population density is
high, it is easy for a service provider
to recover equipment costs, but each rural
customer may require expensive equipment
to get connected.
Several rural broadband solutions exist,
though each has its own pitfalls and limitations[clarification
needed]. Some choices are better than others,
but are dependent on how proactive the local
phone company is about upgrading their rural
technology.
Wireless Internet Service Provider (WISPs)
are rapidly becoming a popular broadband
option for rural areas,[citation needed]
although the technology's line-of-sight
requirements hamper connectivity in areas
with hilly and heavily foliated terrain.
In addition, compared to hard-wired connectivity,
there are security risks (unless robust
security protocols are enabled); speeds
are significantly slower (2 – 50 times slower);
and the network can be less stable, due
to interference from other wireless devices,
weather and line-of-sight problems.Al[6]
Satellite
Internet:
Main article: Satellite Internet
Satellites in geostationary orbits are able
to relay broadband data from the satellite
company to each customer. Satellite Internet
is usually among the most expensive ways
of gaining broadband Internet access, but
in rural areas it may only compete with
cellular broadband. However, costs have
been coming down in recent years to the
point that it is becoming more competitive
with other broadband options.
Broadband satellite Internet also has a
high latency problem is due to the signal
having to travel to an altitude of 35,786 km
(22,236 mi) above sea level (from the
equator) out into space to a satellite in
geostationary orbit and back to Earth again..
The signal delay can be as much as 500 milliseconds
to 900 milliseconds, which makes this service
unsuitable for applications requiring real-time
user input such as certain multiplayer Internet
games and first-person shooters played over
the connection. Despite this, it is still
possible for many games to be played, but
the scope is limited to real-time strategy
or turn-based games. The functionality of
live interactive access to a distant computer
can also be subject to the problems caused
by high latency. These problems are more
than tolerable for just basic email access
and web browsing and in most cases are barely
noticeable.
For geostationary satellites there is no
way to eliminate this problem. The delay
is primarily due to the great distances
travelled which, even at the speed of light
(about 300,000 km/second or 186,000
miles per second), can be significant. Even
if all other signalling delays could be
eliminated it still takes electromagnetic
radio waves about 500 milliseconds, or half
a second, to travel from ground level to
the satellite and back to the ground, a
total of over 71,400 km (44,366 mi)
to travel from the source to the destination,
and over 143,000 km (88,856 mi)
for a round trip (user to ISP, and then
back to user—with zero network delays).
Factoring in other normal delays from network
sources gives a typical one-way connection
latency of 500–700 ms from the user to the
ISP, or about 1,000–1,400 milliseconds latency
for the total Round Trip Time (RTT) back
to the user. This is far worse than most
dial-up modem users' experience, at typically
only 150–200 ms total latency.
Medium Earth Orbit (MEO) and Low Earth Orbit
(LEO) satellites however do not have such
great delays. The current LEO constellations
of Globalstar and Iridium satellites have
delays of less than 40 ms round trip, but
their throughput is less than broadband
at 64 kbps per channel. The Globalstar constellation
orbits 1,420 km above the earth and
Iridium orbits at 670 km altitude.
The proposed O3b Networks MEO constellation
scheduled for deployment in 2010 would orbit
at 8,062 km, with RTT latency of approximately
125 ms. The proposed new network is also
designed for much higher throughput with
links well in excess of 1 Gbps (Giga bits
per second).
Most satellite Internet providers also have
a FAP (Fair Access Policy). Perhaps one
of the largest disadvantages of satellite
Internet, these FAPs usually throttle a
user's throughput to dial-up data rates
after a certain "invisible wall"
is hit (usually around 200 MB a day). This
FAP usually lasts for 24 hours after the
wall is hit, and a user's throughput is
restored to whatever tier they paid for.
This makes bandwidth-intensive activities
nearly impossible to complete in a reasonable
amount of time (examples include P2P and
newsgroup binary downloading).
The European ASTRA2Connect system has a
FAP based on a monthly limit of 2Gbyte of
data downloaded, with download data rates
reduced for the remainder of the month if
the limit is exceeded.
Advantages:
- True global broadband Internet access
availability
- Mobile connection to the Internet (with
some providers)
Disadvantages:
- High latency compared to other broadband
services, especially 2-way satellite service
- Unreliable: drop-outs are common during
travel, inclement weather, and during
sunspot activity
- The narrow-beam highly directional antenna
must be accurately pointed to the satellite
orbiting overhead
- The Fair Access Policy limits heavy
usage, if applied by the service provider
- VPN use is discouraged, problematic,
and/or restricted with satellite broadband,
although available at a price
- One-way satellite service requires the
use of a modem or other data uplink connection
- Satellite dishes are very large. Although
most of them employ plastic to reduce
weight, they are typically between 80
and 120 cm (30 to 48 inches)
in diameter.
Cellular
broadband:
Main article: Cellular broadband
Cellular phone towers are very widespread,
and as cellular networks move to third generation
(3G) networks they can support fast data;
using technologies such as EVDO, HSDPA and
UMTS.
These can give broadband access to the Internet,
with a cell phone, with Cardbus, ExpressCard,
or USB cellular modems, or with cellular
broadband routers, which allow more than
one computer to be connected to the Internet
using one cellular connection.
Power-line
Internet:
Main article: Power line communication
This is a new service still in its infancy
that may eventually permit broadband Internet
data to travel down standard high-voltage
power lines. However, the system has a number
of complex issues, the primary one being
that power lines are inherently a very noisy
environment. Every time a device turns on
or off, it introduces a pop or click into
the line. Energy-saving devices often introduce
noisy harmonics into the line. The system
must be designed to deal with these natural
signaling disruptions and work around them.
Broadband over power lines (BPL), also known
as Power line communication, has developed
faster in Europe than in the US due to a
historical difference in power system design
philosophies. Nearly all large power grids
transmit power at high voltages in order
to reduce transmission losses, then near
the customer use step-down transformers
to reduce the voltage. Since BPL signals
cannot readily pass through transformers,
repeaters must be attached to the transformers.
In the US, it is common for a small transformer
hung from a utility pole to service a single
house. In Europe, it is more common for
a somewhat larger transformer to service
10 or 100 houses. For delivering power to
customers, this difference in design makes
little difference, but it means delivering
BPL over the power grid of a typical US
city will require an order of magnitude
more repeaters than would be required in
a comparable European city.
The second major issue is signal strength
and operating frequency. The system is expected
to use frequencies in the 10 to 30 MHz range,
which has been used for decades by licensed
amateur radio operators, as well as international
shortwave broadcasters and a variety of
communications systems (military, aeronautical,
etc.). Power lines are unshielded and will
act as transmitters for the signals they
carry, and have the potential to completely
wipe out the usefulness of the 10 to 30 MHz
range for shortwave communications purposes,
as well as compromising the security of
its users.
Wireless
ISP:
Main article: Wireless Internet service
provider
This typically employs the current low-cost
802.11 Wi-Fi radio systems to link up remote
locations over great distances, but can
use other higher-power radio communications
systems as well.
Traditional 802.11b was licensed for omnidirectional
service spanning only 100-150 meters (300–500 ft).
By focusing the signal down to a narrow
beam with a Yagi antenna it can instead
operate reliably over a distance of many
miles, although the technology's line-of-sight
requirements hamper connectivity in areas
with hilly and heavily foliated terrain.
In addition, compared to hard-wired connectivity,
there are security risks (unless robust
security protocols are enabled); speeds
are significantly slower (2 – 50 times slower);
and the network can be less stable, due
to interference from other wireless devices
and networks, weather and line-of-sight
problems.[6]
Rural Wireless-ISP installations are typically
not commercial in nature and are instead
a patchwork of systems built up by hobbyists
mounting antennas on radio masts and towers,
agricultural storage silos, very tall trees,
or whatever other tall objects are available.
There are currently a number of companies
that provide this service. A wireless Internet
access provider map for USA is publicly
available for WISPS.
iBlast:
iBlast was the brand name for a theoretical
bandwidth (7 Mbit/s), one-way digital data
transmission technology from a Digital TV
station to users that was developed between
June 2000 to October 2005.
Advantages:
- Low cost, broadband data transmission
from TV station to users. This technology
can be used for transmitting website /
files from Internet.
Disadvantages:
- One way data transmission.
- Privacy/security.
- Lack of 8VSB tuner built into many consumer
electronic devices needed to receive the
iBlast signal.
- In the end, the
disadvantages outweighed the advantages
and the glut of fiberoptic capacity that
ensued following the collapse of the Internet
bubble drove the cost of transmission
so low that an ancillary service such
as this was unnecessary, and the company
folded at the end of 2005. The partner
television stations as well as over 500
additional television stations not part
of the iBlast Network continue to transmit
separate digital signals as mandated by
the Telecommunications Act of 1996.
Number
|
Prefix
(Abbreviation) |
Common
Name |
1000 |
Kilo (K) |
Thousand
|
1000,000 |
Mega (M) |
Million
|
1000,000,000 |
Giga (G) |
Billion |
1000,000,000,000 |
Tera (T) |
Trillion |
1000,000,000,000,000 |
Peta (P) |
Quadrillion |
|