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Digital Subscriber Line - Equipment |  | Digital Subscriber Line - Equipment: Encyclopedia II - Digital Subscriber Line - Equipment |  | The subscriber end of the connection consists of a DSL modem. This converts data from the digital signals used by computers into a voltage signal of a suitable frequency range which is then applied to the phone line.
In the early days of DSL, installation required a technician to visit the premises. A "splitter" was installed near the demarcation point, from which a dedicated data line was installed. Today, many DSL vendors offer a self-install option, in which they ship equipment and instructions to the customer. In this case, since ...
See also:Digital Subscriber Line, Digital Subscriber Line - History, Digital Subscriber Line - Operation, Digital Subscriber Line - Equipment, Digital Subscriber Line - Protocols and configurations, Digital Subscriber Line - DSL technologies, Digital Subscriber Line - Transmission methods |  | | Digital Subscriber Line, Digital Subscriber Line - DSL technologies, Digital Subscriber Line - Equipment, Digital Subscriber Line - History, Digital Subscriber Line - Operation, Digital Subscriber Line - Protocols and configurations, Digital Subscriber Line - Transmission methods, Broadband Internet access, Asymmetric Digital Subscriber Line (ADSL), Carrierless Amplitude Phase Modulation (CAP), Digital subscriber line access multiplexer (DSLAM), DSL around the world, IDSL, Filter, ISDN, Modem, Orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing (OFDM), POTS, Router, Triple play (telecommunications), Wi-Fi. |  | |
|  |  | Digital Subscriber Line: Encyclopedia II - Digital Subscriber Line - Equipment
Digital Subscriber Line - Equipment
The subscriber end of the connection consists of a DSL modem. This converts data from the digital signals used by computers into a voltage signal of a suitable frequency range which is then applied to the phone line.
In the early days of DSL, installation required a technician to visit the premises. A "splitter" was installed near the demarcation point, from which a dedicated data line was installed. Today, many DSL vendors offer a self-install option, in which they ship equipment and instructions to the customer. In this case, since no changes are made to the cable plant on the customer premises, all the phone wires are carrying both POTS and DSL signal frequencies; therefore the customer generally needs to plug a DSL filter into each telephone outlet. However, this can sometimes cause degradation of the DSL signal (especially if more than 5 analogue devices are connected to the line) because the DSL signal is present on all telephone wiring in the building. A way to circumvent this is to install one filter upstream from all telephone jacks in the building, except for the jack to which the DSL modem will be connected. Since this requires wiring changes by the customer and may not work on some (poorly designed) household telephone wiring, it is rarely done. It is usually much easier to install filters at each telephone jack that is in use.
At the exchange a digital subscriber line access multiplexer (DSLAM) terminates the DSL circuits and aggregates them, where they are handed off onto other networking transports. It also separates out the voice component.
Other related archivesADSL, ATM, Asymmetric Digital Subscriber Line, Bellcore, Broadband Internet access, Carrierless Amplitude Phase Modulation, DHCP, DSL around the world, DSL filter, DSLAM, Digital subscriber line access multiplexer, Ethernet, Europe, Filter, G. Symmetric High-speed Digital Subscriber Line, Hz, IDSL, IP address, ISDN, Internet service provider, MAC address, Mbit/s, Modem, North America, Nyquist theorem, Orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing, POTS, PPP, PPPoA, PPPoE, Public Switched Telephone Network, Rate-Adaptive Digital Subscriber Line, Router, SDSL, Shannon capacity, Symmetric Digital Subscriber Line, Telcordia Technologies, Triple play (telecommunications), VDSL, VLSI, Very-high-bit-rate Digital Subscriber Line, Very-high-bit-rate Digital Subscriber Line 2, Wi-Fi, aliasing, analog, authentication, bandwidth, bonded, bridged, broadband, broadband Internet access, cable modems, cable television, central office, commercial bandwidth, contention ratios, demarcation point, dial-up, digital, digital signal processing, digital subscriber line access multiplexer, discrete multitone modulation, downstream, electronics, fiber to the curb, fiber-optic, frequency spectrum, high speed Internet, incumbent local exchange carriers, last mile, local loop, modem, modems, orders of magnitude, routed, router, subscriber, subscriber line, telephone, telephone exchange, telephone line, transceivers, triple play, twisted pair, unshielded twisted pair, upstream, voltage
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Equipment", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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