cheap-internet.info

 

HOME

 CHEAP INTERNET ACCESS REVIEWS

 CHEAP INTERNET SERVICE COMPARISON

ISP ARTICLES

ISP TERMINOLOGY

   LOW COST   INTERNET ACCESS:

NETZERO INTERNET

NETZERO REQUIREMENTS

QWEST DSL

JUNO

PEOPLEPC

EARTHLINK ONLINE

NETSCAPE BENEFITS

 WEB HOSTING REVIEWS

NEXT PAGE

Link to us

Thursday April 1, 2004

How do Dial-up Connections Work?

A standard telephone line (often called a POTS or Plain Old Telephone Service line) uses an analog signal to transmit audio information from your home or office to the local telephone company Central Office (often called a CO). There, the copper wire from your house is terminated in a set of special machinery that allows the audio signal from your house to enter the Public Switched Telephone Network (PSTN) where it is routed to the person or company that you are calling.

A regular dial up modem, modulates a digital signal from your computer into an analog signal that can be easily transmitted over the regular telephone network, and then gets demodulated by special modems at EasyStreet. This modulation and demodulation process is the process that causes the 'weird screaming' that you always hear at the beginning of a dial-up Internet connection, and it is where the term modem comes from.

Because regular analog modems are restricted to the voice telephone network, they only use a small portion of the available bandwidth that could be transmitted over your copper phone line. The maximum amount of data that you can receive using an ordinary modem is determined by the quality of your phone line, but it is generally restricted to between 30-45 kbps.

Visit our news Archive:

Jan | Feb | Mar | Apr | May | Jun | Jul | Aug | Sep | Oct | Nov | Dec

 

the Ultimate Internet

   

 ©2003 cheap-internet.info. All rights reserved.