Industrial Data Communications 4th Edition

Chapter 7 - Wide Area Networks: Cable Modems

Another Internet connectivity medium, though not deployed in a large number of industries is

the cable modem. The total number of cable modems in use roughly equals the number of

DSL customers ( May 2006) although with the improved roll out by telcos, the number of DSL

lines in use may significantly outnumber cable customers (depending upon whose marketing

statistics you wish to accept). Providing (typically) a 512 Kbps to 6 Mbps data rate to customers

when the cable segment is not loaded, data rates drop as loading goes up because all

customers are using the same shared media (just like a real shared media network). As with

the telcos, cable providers offer different rates and tariffs depending on the speed and service

you require. Cable modems have brought one key benefit: they gave telcos the impetus to

implement DSL. Unfortunately, neither the cable modems nor DSL do rural and far suburban

customers much good. These users are at present either stuck with 33.6 Kbps analog modems

or must use a satellite system with its correspondingly increased costs.


In the next section we introduce some solutions for these customers. Several wireless

schemes are proposed even for remote rural customers, but the direct satellite link is already

here (typically costing $300 to install and near $80 monthly, circa 2007), and with the exception

of occasional weather-related outages satellite can supply DSL data rates (or better).

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