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Broadband Internet Access
Overview
Overview
Broadband transmission rates
| Connection |
Transmission Speed |
| 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 |
Broadband is often called high-speed Internet, because it usually has
a high rate of data. In general, any connection to the customer of 256 kbit/s
(0.256 Mbit/s) or more is 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 200 kbit/s (0.2 Mbit/s) in one direction, and
advanced broadband is at least 200 kbit/s in both directions. The 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 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 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 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 network traffic engineering. 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 specialised
networks. The data rates on most broadband services still do not suffice to
provide good quality video, as MPEG-2 quality
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. The MPEG-4 format
delivers high-quality video at 2 Mbit/s, at the high end of
cable
modem and
ADSL performance. The
Ogg Tarkin
format is intended to deliver similar performance.
Increased bandwidth has already made an impact on newsgroups:
postings to groups such as alt.binaries.* have grown from JPEG images 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.
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