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by p3n1s
939 days ago
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56k was not relevant for point to point communicating between arbitrary points on the network though. 56kbps dial-up worked in an asymmetric fashion with a fully digitally connected modem on one end (eg the ISP). Station to station analog modem standards capped out at 33.6k. > DSL isn't really fundamentally different from a 56k There's a great deal of additional integrated digital signal processing to make DSL work that was too costly for consumer modems at the time. I wouldn't agree with this assessment.
And other than operating on phone lines for last mile it is completely different on all the layers and uses completely different equipment. > 56k hit a wall because circuit switching has fundamental disadvantages. Packet switching allowed us to get past that. There were circuit switched networks far faster than 56k, so not sure this had much to do with any inherent limitation. Packet switching has obvious advantages for network utilization and was a necessary evolution but I don't think it is relevant to any 56k limit or the revolution in DSP that make multi-megabit over copper pairs possible. |
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