Industrial Data Communications 4th Edition

Chapter 7 - Wide Area Networks: Summary: Modems

In this chapter we have discussed modems, from low speed to high speed, that operate
over the typical telephone wireline. Data speeds increased from the high speed of the early
1970s (2,400 bps) to a magnitude or greater than that in just three and a half decades.
Even more significant is the fact that for one of the first auto-dialing, auto-answer modems
you would have paid more than $500 for a data rate of 300 bps in 1984, and in 2007 you
could purchase a 56 Kbps modem with bells and whistles for around $20. And that is
without considering data compression, which can up the throughput to a continuous
average of near 2.8 to 1, nearly 250 times the performance for one tenth the costs, and
these modems are more reliable. The explosion in the use of Internet graphics and the need
to transmit objects rather than just character-based text have fueled the insatiable appetite
for more bytes per buck and wringing the highest possible data rate out of the wireline.

Can speeds greater than today's wireline modems be increased? Remembering the engineer
who once told the author, "No more than 2400 bps down a wireline...." the author refuses
to speculate. I do know that for those who need more bandwidth now, there are presentday
solutions but not necessarily at one-tenth the cost of earlier modems. These solutions
are outlined in the next section on digital line offerings.

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