Industrial Data Communications 4th Edition

Chapter 7 - Wide Area Networks: The Answer: Digital Subscriber Line (DSL)

Using the same copper pairs that bring the venerable voice-grade wireline to your residence
or business, digital subscriber line technology, (x)DSL, has gained wide acceptance. It is considered
the broadband technology because it can deliver more than one service at a time (it
does not consist of a baseband signal). There are many varieties of DSL. Each requires that
various modifications be made to the central office wiring and perhaps to the premise's
wiring (eliminating impedance-matching devices that were designed for voice frequencies,
leaving just the bare copper). It should be noted that DSL as offered is not just a connection
medium but must be considered as a connection to the Internet. ISP services are offered in
the price and connectivity is complete with one or more IP. One should ascertain that VPN
or other security techniques are used if DSL lines are to be considered.
Among the many kinds of DSL are these:

 ADSL - asymmetric DSL 
 HDSL - high-bit-rate DSL 
 RADSL - rate adaptive DSL 
 SDSL - symmetric DSL 
 VDSL - very-high-bit-rate DSL 

Here we will only discuss the most often encountered type: ADSL. In ADSL, the upload data
rate is generally less than the download data rate. Depending on which type of ADSL you
use, the upload data rates may vary from 64 Kbps to 1.5 Mbps and the download data
rates from 500 Kbps to 6 Mbps. Typically, these rates are tariffed quite reasonably, with residential
service with an Internet service provider (ISP) costing about $19 - $24 a month (circa
May 2007). This will allow you (typically) one IP address. Businesses, on the other hand, are
generally given a more symmetrical rate (that is, upload and download are closer together
in frequency) and several IP addresses for a business rate of about $90 (circa May 2007) a
month. Either service includes the capability of carrying on a telephone conversation at the
same time that data is being utilized on the DSL lines. This makes an attractive package:
trading business telephone line costs for not only a business phone line but also high-speed
Internet and ISP access for the same rate.

DSL lines are not totally digital in that they use modulation of sorts: either CAP (Carrierless
amplitude and phase modulation-analogous to the techniques used by the cable TV
system) or DMT (Discrete Multi-Tone-a proven technique for placing high data rates on
lines of limited bandwidth). Originally used in wireline modems, DMT uses many tones,
each of which is modulated with a part of the data. As a result, the decision rate for the
media is quite low. One DMT scheme has the data divided into 256 channels, each with 4
KHz capacity. Each data segment is assigned a unique ID and is spaced all over the allocated
bandwidth. At the receive end the segments are reassembled (by ID), and the packet is
passed upward.

At some point in the near future, everyone could have a DSL line to their business, to their
residence, and so on. There will be challenges along the way, however. DSL as supplied by
the telephone operating companies use the telcos' installed copper voice pairs. The data
rate varies inversely with the distance from the central office, and once you are past 18,000
feet or so DSL doesn't work very well at all without the use of repeaters. And to make
matters worse, not all central offices support DSL. However, seeing the competitive marketplace,
telephone operating companies are moving at an extraordinary speed (for them) to
achieve wide coverage for DSL. If you aren't yet near a central office equipment that supports
DSL, you may obtain DSL like speeds over radio links or even (rather reasonably) by
up/down link satellite.

 

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