|









| |
|

|
|
|

Fast Guide to DSL: (HW205) |
|
DSL (Digital Subscriber Line) is a technology for bringing high-bandwidth
information to homes and small businesses over ordinary copper
telephone lines. xDSL refers to different variations of DSL,
such as ADSL, HDSL, and RADSL. Assuming your home or small
business is close enough to a telephone company
central office that offers DSL service, you may be able to
receive data at rates up to 6.1 megabits (millions of bits) per
second (of a theoretical 8.448 megabits per second), enabling
continuous transmission of motion video, audio, and even 3-D
effects. More typically, individual connections will provide
from 1.544
Mbps to 512 Kbps downstream and about 128 Kbps upstream. A
DSL line can carry both data and voice signals and the data part
of the line is continuously connected. DSL installations began
in 1998 and will continue at a greatly increased pace through
the next decade in a number of communities in the U.S. and
elsewhere. Compaq, Intel, and Microsoft working with telephone
companies have developed a standard and easier-to-install form
of ADSL called
G.lite that is accelerating deployment. DSL is expected to
replace
ISDN in many areas and to compete with the
cable modem in bringing multimedia and 3-D to homes and
small businesses.
How It Works
Traditional phone service (sometimes called
POTS for "plain old telephone service") connects your home
or small business to a telephone company office over copper
wires that are wound around each other and called
twisted pair. Traditional phone service was created to let
you exchange voice information with other phone users and the
type of signal used for this kind of transmission is called an
analog signal. An input device such as a phone set takes an
acoustic signal (which is a natural analog signal) and converts
it into an electrical equivalent in terms of volume (signal
amplitude) and pitch (frequency of wave change). Since the
telephone company's signalling is already set up for this analog
wave transmission, it's easier for it to use that as the way to
get information back and forth between your telephone and the
telephone company. That's why your computer has to have a
modem - so that it can demodulate the analog signal and turn
its values into the string of 0 and 1 values that is called
digital information.
Because analog transmission only uses a small portion of the
available amount of information that could be transmitted over
copper wires, the maximum amount of data that you can receive
using ordinary modems is about 56 Kbps (thousands of bits per
second). (With
ISDN, which one might think of as a limited precursor to
DSL, you can receive up to 128 Kbps.) The ability of your
computer to receive information is constrained by the fact that
the telephone company filters information that arrives as
digital data, puts it into analog form for your telephone line,
and requires your modem to change it back into digital. In other
words, the analog transmission between your home or business and
the phone company is a bandwidth bottleneck.
Digital Subscriber Line is a technology that assumes digital
data does not require change into analog form and back. Digital
data is transmitted to your computer directly as digital data
and this allows the phone company to use a much wider bandwidth
for transmitting it to you. Meanwhile, if you choose, the signal
can be separated so that some of the bandwidth is used to
transmit an analog signal so that you can use your telephone and
computer on the same line and at the same time.
Splitter-based vs. Splitterless DSL
Most DSL technologies require that a signal splitter be
installed at a home or business, requiring the expense of a
phone company visit and installation. However, it is possible to
manage the splitting remotely from the central office. This is
known as splitterless DSL, "DSL Lite," G.Lite, or Universal ADSL
and has recently been made a standard.
Modulation
Technologies
Several
modulation technologies are used by various kinds of DSL,
although these are being standardized by the International
Telecommunication Union (ITU). Different DSL modem makers are
using either Discrete Multitone Technology (DMT) or Carrierless
Amplitude Modulation (CAP). A third technology, known as
Multiple Virtual Line (MVL), is another possibility.
Factors
Affecting the Experienced Data Rate
DSL modems follow the data rate multiples established by North
American and European standards. In general, the maximum range
for DSL without a
repeater is 5.5 km (18,000 feet). As distance decreases
toward the telephone company office, the data rate increases.
Another factor is the gauge of the copper wire. The heavier 24
gauge wire carries the same data rate farther than 26 gauge
wire. If you live beyond the 5.5 kilometer range, you may still
be able to have DSL if your phone company has extended the local
loop with
optical fiber cable.
The Digital Subscriber Line Access Multiplexer (DSLAM)
To interconnect multiple DSL users to a high-speed
backbone network, the telephone company uses a Digital
Subscriber Line Access Multiplexer (DSLAM).
Typically, the DSLAM connects to an asynchronous transfer mode (ATM)
network that can aggregate data transmission at
gigabit data rates. At the other end of each transmission, a
DSLAM demultiplexes the signals and forwards them to appropriate
individual DSL connections.
Who's Offering It When
Here is a sample of current and planned offerings in the U.S.
DSL is also offered in the
UK and elsewhere.
 |
Verizon has announced plans for a wide deployment
of ASDL in the Northeastern U.S. to both home and corporate
customers. The service is currently offered in the Boston,
Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Washington DC, New York City, and
Northern New Jersey metropolitan areas. Additional markets
will be announced in the future. Verizon offers what it calls
Personal Infospeed DSL at speeds of 640 Kbps downstream and 90
Kbps upstream for $39.95 a month, or $59.95 a month including
Internet access. Professional Infospeed offers speeds of 1.6
Mbps downstream and 90 Kbps upstream at $59.95 per month, or
$109.95 per month with Internet access. Power Infospeed
provides up to 7.1 Mbps downstream and 680 Kbps upstream for
$109.95 per month, or $189.95 per month with Internet access.
Network equipment providers are Alcatel, Globespan, and
Westell. Among PC manufacturers that will support Infospeed
technology are Apple Computer, Compaq, and Dell Computer.
|
 |
In the
Midwest United States,
Primary Network is offering DSL service to St.
Louis, Missouri-area residents and businesses. Primary Network
says that it is or will be the largest Midwest provider of DSL
service, with 20 central office sites. Download maximums are
between 384 Kbps and 1.54 Mbps. Upload maximums are between
128 Kbps and 384 Kbps. Prices start at $49.95 monthly and
include Internet Access. For more information, visit
http://www.primary.net/dsl/. |
 |
COVAD is currently offering DSL in Nashville and
Memphis, Tennessee, and in Louisville and Lexington, Kentucky,
and plans to offer service in 25 other cities by early 2000.
|
 |
SBC Communications plans to bring ADSL to over 8
million homes in California, Missouri, and Texas by the
beginning of 2000. In
California,
over 255 telephone company central offices will provide
service to 5 million homes and 900,000 businesses. In Missouri
and Texas, SBC's Southwestern Bell company will upgrade 271
central offices for 3.2 million homes and 440,000 businesses.
Customers will need a $198 "ADSL modem" and will pay a basic
$39 a month on yearly basis for unlimited service, or $49 with
access to the Internet. Business or high-demand users can pay
more and get faster download and upload speeds. For the basic
rate, users are guaranteed 384 Kbps downstream and 128 Kbps
upstream. Power users can get up to 6 Mbps downstream and 384
Kbps upstream. |
 |
BellSouth is offering a splitter-based ADSL service
in 30 markets through Network Service Provider (NSP) channels.
BellSouth provides access to all DSL-qualified loops through a
single asynchronous transfer mode (ATM) port in each of 13
LATAs in eight Southeastern states. Access One, BellSouth's
service partner, has committed to deploy a minimum of 10,000
DSL lines to its customers over the next two years.
|
 |
Qwest (formerly US West) plans to offer DSL service
in 40 cities in the western part of the U.S. Currently, DSL is
offered in Portland, Oregon, and Seattle, Washington. Qwest
uses CAP modulation but says they are equipped to support DMT
if that becomes a standard. |
 |
NETinc, a Canadian company, is deploying ADSL in
Hamilton, Ontario, using
Paradyne technology. Dowstream data rates will be
up to 7 Mbps and upstream up to 1 Mbps. Service to residences
will be about $50 a month, to corporations $200 a month.
|
DSL Providers No Longer Providing Service
A number of companies that provided DSL service are either no
longer in business or have transferred their customers to other
providers. Some of these include:
 |
Flashcom.com |
 |
FreeDSL.com |
Types of DSL
The variation called ADSL (Asymmetric Digital Subscriber Line)
is the form of DSL that will become most familiar to home and
small business users. ADSL is called "asymmetric" because most
of its two-way or
duplex bandwidth is devoted to the downstream direction,
sending data to the user. Only a small portion of bandwidth is
available for upstream or user-interaction messages. However,
most Internet and especially graphics- or multi-media intensive
Web data need lots of downstream bandwidth, but user requests
and responses are small and require little upstream bandwidth.
Using ADSL, up to 6.1 megabits per second of data can be sent
downstream and up to 640 Kbps upstream. The high downstream
bandwidth means that your telephone line will be able to bring
motion video, audio, and 3-D images to your computer or
hooked-in TV set. In addition, a small portion of the downstream
bandwidth can be devoted to voice rather data, and you can hold
phone conversations without requiring a separate line.
Unlike a similar service over your cable TV line, using ADSL,
you won't be competing for bandwidth with neighbors in your
area. In many cases, your existing telephone lines will work
with ADSL. In some areas, they may need upgrading.
CDSL
CDSL (Consumer DSL) is a version of DSL, trademarked by Rockwell
Corp., that is somewhat slower than ADSL (1 Mbps downstream,
probably less upstream) and has the advantage that a "splitter"
does not need to be installed at the user's end. Rockwell no
longer provides information about CSDL at its Web site and does
not appear to be marketing it.
G.Lite or DSL
Lite
G.lite (also known as DSL Lite, splitterless ADSL, and
Universal ADSL) is essentially a slower ADSL that doesn't
require splitting of the line at the user end but manages to
split it for the user remotely at the telephone company. This
saves the cost of what the phone companies call "the truck
roll." G.Lite, officially ITU-T standard G-992.2, provides a
data rate from 1.544 Mbps to 6 Mpbs downstream and from 128 Kbps
to 384 Kbps upstream. G.Lite is expected to become the most
widely installed form of DSL.
HDSL
HDSL (High bit-rate Digital Subscriber Line), one of the
earliest forms of DSL, is used for wideband digital transmission
within a corporate site and between the telephone company and a
customer. The main characteristic of HDSL is that it is
symmetrical: an equal amount of bandwidth is available in both
directions. HDSL can carry as much on a single wire of
twisted-pair cable as can be carried on a T1 line (up to 1.544
Mbps) in North America or an E1 line (up to 2.048 Mbps) in
Europe over a somewhat longer range and is considered an
alternative to a T1 or E1 connection.
IDSL
IDSL (ISDN DSL) is somewhat of a misnomer since it's really
closer to ISDN data rates and service at 128 Kbps than to the
much higher rates of ADSL.
RADSL
RADSL (Rate-Adaptive DSL) is an ADSL technology from Westell in
which software is able to determine the rate at which signals
can be transmitted on a given customer phone line and adjust the
delivery rate accordingly. Westell's FlexCap2 system uses RADSL
to deliver from 640 Kbps to 2.2 Mbps downstream and from 272
Kbps to 1.088 Mbps upstream over an existing line.
SDSL
SDSL (Symmetric DSL) is similar to HDSL with a single
twisted-pair line, carrying 1.544 Mbps (U.S.
and Canada) or 2.048 Mbps (Europe)
each direction on a duplex line. It's symmetric because the data
rate is the same in both directions.
UDSL
UDSL (Unidirectional DSL) is a proposal from a European company.
It's a unidirectional version of HDSL.
VDSL
VDSL (Very high data rate DSL) is a developing technology that
promises much higher data rates over relatively short distances
(between 51 and 55 Mbps over lines up to 1,000 feet or 300
meters in length). It's envisioned that VDSL may emerge somewhat
after ADSL is widely deployed and co-exist with it. The
transmission technology (CAP, DMT, or other) and its
effectiveness in some environments is not yet determined. A
number of standards organizations are working on it.
x2/DSL
x2/DSL is a
modem from 3Com that supports 56 Kbps modem communication
but is upgradeable through new software installation to ADSL
when it becomes available in the user's area. 3Com calls it "the
last modem you will ever need."
A DSL Summary Table
|
DSL Type |
Description |
Data Rate
Downstream;
Upstream |
Distance Limit |
Application |
|
IDSL |
ISDN Digital Subscriber Line |
128 Kbps |
18,000 feet on 24 gauge wire |
Similar to the ISDN BRI service but
data only (no voice on the same line) |
|
CDSL |
Consumer DSL
from Rockwell |
1 Mbps downstream; less upstream |
18,000 feet on 24 gauge wire |
Splitterless home and small business
service; similar to DSL Lite |
|
DSL Lite (same as G.Lite) |
"Splitterless" DSL without the "truck
roll" |
From 1.544 Mbps to 6 Mbps downstream,
depending on the subscribed service |
18,000 feet on 24 gauge wire |
The standard ADSL; sacrifices speed
for not having to install a splitter at the user's home or
business |
|
G.Lite (same as DSL Lite) |
"Splitterless" DSL without the "truck
roll" |
From 1.544 Mbps to 6 Mbps , depending
on the subscribed service |
18,000 feet on 24 gauge wire |
The standard ADSL; sacrifices speed
for not having to install a splitter at the user's home or
business |
|
HDSL |
High bit-rate Digital Subscriber Line |
1.544 Mbps duplex on two twisted-pair
lines;
2.048 Mbps duplex on three twisted-pair lines |
12,000 feet on 24 gauge wire |
T1/E1 service between server and
phone company or within a company;
WAN, LAN, server access |
|
SDSL |
Symmetric DSL |
1.544 Mbps duplex (U.S. and Canada);
2.048 Mbps (Europe) on a single duplex line downstream and
upstream |
12,000 feet on 24 gauge wire |
Same as for HDSL but requiring only
one line of twisted-pair |
|
ADSL |
Asymmetric Digital Subscriber Line |
1.544 to 6.1 Mbps downstream;
16 to 640 Kbps upstream |
1.544 Mbps at 18,000 feet;
2.048 Mbps at 16,000 feet;
6.312 Mpbs at 12,000 feet;
8.448 Mbps at 9,000 feet |
Used for Internet and Web access,
motion video, video on demand, remote LAN access |
|
RADSL |
Rate-Adaptive DSL from Westell |
Adapted to the line, 640 Kbps to 2.2
Mbps downstream; 272 Kbps to 1.088 Mbps upstream |
Not provided |
Similar to ADSL |
|
UDSL |
Unidirectional DSL proposed by a
company in Europe |
Not known |
Not known |
Similar to HDSL |
|
VDSL |
Very high Digital Subscriber Line |
12.9 to 52.8 Mbps downstream;
1.5 to 2.3 Mbps upstream;
1.6 Mbps to 2.3 Mbps downstream |
4,500 feet at 12.96 Mbps;
3,000 feet at 25.82 Mbps; 1,000 feet at 51.84 Mbps |
ATM
networks;
Fiber to the Neighborhood |
|
|
|
|
|
|