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    07 February, 2008, by Ben Chai

    So as you can see from the above table a 2Mb/sec line is actually equivalent to roughly a 250KB/sec. Note how bits is written compared to bytes ie:

    two megabits per second is written 2Mb/s and two megabytes per second is written 2MB/s

     

    ADSL - Asymmetric Digital Subscriber Line

    First, let’s deal with something many of us already know about – ADSL or Asymmetric Digital Subscriber Line. The traditional ADSL line has or ADSL1 has a maximum speed of 2Mb/s. However if you read the tiny print you would see that this only applies to the downstream speed (ie files you receive).

    What is never made clear is that your upstream or upload speed is typically 256Kb/s ie a mere 31KB/s. You can see that if your business sent a lot of email or was constantly uploading large files to the web that this upload speed would just be too inadequate for most businesses. Hence when purchasing an ADSL line it is important that you ask what the upstream speeds are.

    Current limitations of ADSL are:-

    Must be enabled in local exchangeCan only be used over copper,Poor Upload Speeds at time of writing it has a maximum speed of 8Mb/sNo SLA

    ADSL prices fluctuate but typically cost £180 per annum.

    Continued on next page Tags: Broadband, Business Continuity, Companies, IT Services, Internet
    Ben Chai
    Posted by
    Ben Chai
    on 07 February, 2008

      Ben Chai is a freelance writer and technical consultant. He is the author of several Microsoft books, is the co-owner of incomingthought.com, a company that specialises in security white papers and writes for Securityvibes.  





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