Digital Subscriber Line
digital telephone technology that allows data transmission of up to 6.1 megabits per second using ordinary telephone lines (Telecommunications) | ||||
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Digital Subscriber Line definition was found in categories: Computer & Internet(2) Language, Idioms & Slang(2) Science & Technology(1) Encyclopedia(1)
Digital Subscriber Line Definition from Computer & Internet Dictionaries & Glossaries
| FOLDOC |
Digital Subscriber Line
<communications, protocol> (DSL, or Digital Subscriber Loop, xDSL - see below) A family of digital telecommunications protocols designed to allow high speed data communication over the existing copper telephone lines between end-users and telephone companies.
When two conventional modems are connected through the telephone system (PSTN), it treats the communication the same as voice conversations. This has the advantage that there is no investment required from the telephone company (telco) but the disadvantage is that the bandwidth available for the communication is the same as that available for voice conversations, usually 64 kb/s (DS0) at most. The twisted-pair copper cables into individual homes or offices can usually carry significantly more than 64 kb/s but the telco needs to handle the signal as digital rather than analog.
There are many implementation of the basic scheme, differing in the communication protocol used and providing varying service levels. The throughput of the communication can be anything from about 128 kb/s to over 8 Mb/s, the communication can be either symmetric or asymmetric (i.e. the available bandwidth may or may not be the same upstream and downstream). Equipment prices and service fees also vary considerably.
The first technology based on DSL was ISDN, although ISDN is not often recognised as such nowadays. Since then a large number of other protocols have been developed, collectively referred to as xDSL, including HDSL, SDSL, ADSL, and VDSL. As yet none of these have reached very wide deployment but wider deployment is expected for 1998-1999.
http://www.cyberventure.com/~cedpa/databus-issues/v38n1/xdsl.html.
2Wire DSL provider lookup.
["Data Cooks, But Will Vendors Get Burned?", "Supercomm Spotlight On ADSL" & "Lucent Sells Paradine", Wilson & Carol, Inter@ctive Week Vol. 3 #13, p1 & 6, June 24 1996].
(2001-04-30)
<communications, protocol> (DSL, or Digital Subscriber Loop, xDSL - see below) A family of digital telecommunications protocols designed to allow high speed data communication over the existing copper telephone lines between end-users and telephone companies.
When two conventional modems are connected through the telephone system (PSTN), it treats the communication the same as voice conversations. This has the advantage that there is no investment required from the telephone company (telco) but the disadvantage is that the bandwidth available for the communication is the same as that available for voice conversations, usually 64 kb/s (DS0) at most. The twisted-pair copper cables into individual homes or offices can usually carry significantly more than 64 kb/s but the telco needs to handle the signal as digital rather than analog.
There are many implementation of the basic scheme, differing in the communication protocol used and providing varying service levels. The throughput of the communication can be anything from about 128 kb/s to over 8 Mb/s, the communication can be either symmetric or asymmetric (i.e. the available bandwidth may or may not be the same upstream and downstream). Equipment prices and service fees also vary considerably.
The first technology based on DSL was ISDN, although ISDN is not often recognised as such nowadays. Since then a large number of other protocols have been developed, collectively referred to as xDSL, including HDSL, SDSL, ADSL, and VDSL. As yet none of these have reached very wide deployment but wider deployment is expected for 1998-1999.
http://www.cyberventure.com/~cedpa/databus-issues/v38n1/xdsl.html.
2Wire DSL provider lookup.
["Data Cooks, But Will Vendors Get Burned?", "Supercomm Spotlight On ADSL" & "Lucent Sells Paradine", Wilson & Carol, Inter@ctive Week Vol. 3 #13, p1 & 6, June 24 1996].
(2001-04-30)
| Jensen's Technology Glossary |
DSL
Digital Subscriber Line technology for transmitting data up to 50 times faster than present analog modem and ISDN alternatives. Telephone companies are hoping that DSL service will keep telephone lines competitive with cable modems and other competitive alternatives to present telephone transmission services. Telephone companies are considering two dominant DSL technologies: Asymmetric Digital Subscriber Line (ADSL) and High Rate Digital Subscriber Line (HDSL). ADSL technology will deliver higher downstream speeds (6 Mbps) than upstream speeds (640 kbps). For additional information, seehttp://www.kentrox.com/news/110696.pr.html . See also MMDS and Modem .
Digital Subscriber Line technology for transmitting data up to 50 times faster than present analog modem and ISDN alternatives. Telephone companies are hoping that DSL service will keep telephone lines competitive with cable modems and other competitive alternatives to present telephone transmission services. Telephone companies are considering two dominant DSL technologies: Asymmetric Digital Subscriber Line (ADSL) and High Rate Digital Subscriber Line (HDSL). ADSL technology will deliver higher downstream speeds (6 Mbps) than upstream speeds (640 kbps). For additional information, seehttp://www.kentrox.com/news/110696.pr.html . See also MMDS and Modem .
Digital Subscriber Line Definition from Language, Idioms & Slang Dictionaries & Glossaries
| WordNet 2.0 |
digital subscriber line
Noun
1. a generic name for digital lines that are provided by telephone companies to their local subscribers and that carry data at high speeds
(synonym) DSL
(hypernym) telephone line, phone line, telephone circuit, subscriber line, line
Noun
1. a generic name for digital lines that are provided by telephone companies to their local subscribers and that carry data at high speeds
(synonym) DSL
(hypernym) telephone line, phone line, telephone circuit, subscriber line, line
| hEnglish - advanced version |
digital subscriber line
digital subscriber line
(dsl, or digital subscriber loop, xdsl - see below) a family of digital telecommunications protocols designed to allow high speed data communication over the existing copper telephone lines between end-users and telephone companies.
digital subscriber line
(dsl, or digital subscriber loop, xdsl - see below) a family of digital telecommunications protocols designed to allow high speed data communication over the existing copper telephone lines between end-users and telephone companies.
Digital Subscriber Line Definition from Science & Technology Dictionaries & Glossaries
| Telecommunication Standard Terms |
digital subscriber line (DSL)
In Integrated Services Digital Networks (ISDN), equipment that provides full-duplex service on a single twisted metallic pair at a rate sufficient to support ISDN basic access and additional framing, timing recovery, and operational functions. (188 ) Note: The physical termination of the DSL at the network end is the line termination; the physical termination at the customer end is the network termination.
In Integrated Services Digital Networks (ISDN), equipment that provides full-duplex service on a single twisted metallic pair at a rate sufficient to support ISDN basic access and additional framing, timing recovery, and operational functions. (188 ) Note: The physical termination of the DSL at the network end is the line termination; the physical termination at the customer end is the network termination.
Digital Subscriber Line Definition from Encyclopedia Dictionaries & Glossaries
| Wikipedia English - The Free Encyclopedia |
Digital subscriber line
DSL or xDSL, is a family of technologies that provide digital data transmission over the wires of a local telephone network. DSL originally stood for digital subscriber loop, although in recent years, many have adopted digital subscriber line as a more marketing-friendly term for the most popular version of consumer-ready DSL, ADSL.
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