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Broadband Internet Access
Technology
Technology
The standard technology in most areas is
DSL, followed by
cable
modem. Newer technologies for twisted
pair phone lines such as VDSL and pushing fiber
optic connections closer to the subscriber in both telephone and cable
plants are opening up the possibility of higher performance for streaming data, such as
audio and video streams. There are now many streaming audio services, and several
streaming video services. In a few of the many areas not served by cable or
ADSL, community organizations have begun to install Wi-Fi networks.
ISDN is an older
telephone data service that can operate at speeds of up to 128 kbit/s. It is
therefore not really considered a true form of broadband, but it does have the
advantage that it can share an existing phone line, and it has no distance
limitations like DSL. When a phone call occurs, some of the bandwidth is
allocated to the call, reducing the connection speed. When the call ends, the
connection increases speed again. ISDN is a relatively low-cost option for rural
users with otherwise terrible dialup access speeds, but it is starting to be
phased out and is no longer available in some areas.
One of the great challenges of broadband is to provide service to potential
customers in areas of low
population density, such as to farmers and ranchers. 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 thousands of dollars of
equipment to get connected. A similar problem existed a century ago when
electrical power was invented. Cities were the first to receive electric
lighting, as early as 1880, while in the
United States some remote rural areas were still not electrified until the
1940's, and even then only with the help of federally-funded programs like the
Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA).
Several rural broadband solutions exist, though each has its own pitfalls and
limitations. Some choices are better than others, but depend on how proactive
the local phone company is about upgrading their rural technology.
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