DSL speeds vary, depending on the type and condition of the medium. If your house is serviced by fiber optics, then the speed is mostly dependent on how much money you would like to spend, since mostly all speeds are attainable. If your house is serviced by copper, then the most important parameters are the length of the loop from the central office and the amount of bridgetap on the phone line.
Without getting too technical, then, the standard speeds are 1.5 Mbps downstream and 384 kbps upstream. I work as a technician for the largest DSL provider (take a guess who) and these are the speeds that we install 9 times out of 10.
As fiber optics are replacing copper, and the price of packages fall, higher speeds will become the norm by 2008/2010. As an educated guess, the new standard speeds will quickly become between 6 Mbps and 12 Mbps downstream, with upstream speeds about 1/4 of that.
Cheers!
0.056 Mbps. Dial-up is generally measured in Kb and thus is 56 Kbps.
T1 is symmetrical connection, allowing for downloads and uploads of up to 1.5 Mbps - 30 times as fast as 56k dial-up. A single T1 connection can support dozens to hundreds of users, but speed and efficiency drops as more people use it simultaneously.
.what is a dial up number
IEEE 802.11g
2
in GE interface the STM-1 can carry 155 Mbps but on SDH it will carry 142 Mbps
Dial-Up: 56 kbps DSL: 128 kbps - 8 mbps Cable: up to 400 mbps 2G: 384 kbps 3G: 3.6 mbps 3.5G: 14.4 mbps 4G: 21 mbps
Standard speeds supported by 802.11x are 802.11a up to 54 Mbps, 802.11b up to 11 Mbps, 802.11g up to 54 Mbps and 802.11n up to 150 Mbps. These speeds are determined by the frequency band of the connection.
Standard speeds supported by 802.11x are 802.11a up to 54 Mbps, 802.11b up to 11 Mbps, 802.11g up to 54 Mbps and 802.11n up to 150 Mbps. These speeds are determined by the frequency band of the connection.
False
The 802. 11g is a wireless standard that allows devices connect to a network. It supports bandwidth speeds of up to 54 Mbps.
That would be 5 mbps (megabites per second). It is the fastest and up to 150 times faster than dial-up!
54 mbps is standard and actually quite fast. Anything below is moderate or horrid
Gigabit Ethernet : 1Gbps // ATM : 25, 45, 155, or 622 Mbps // Cable Modem : 512 Kbps to 5 Mbps // SDSL : Up to 2.3 Mbps // ISDN : 64 Kbps to 128 KbpsTelephone Lines : 56 KbpsThe question states SLOWEST TO FASTEST so it would be in reverse order:Telephone lines: 56kbps, ISDN: 64 Kbps to 128 KBps, SDSL: Up to 2.3 MBPS, Cable Modem: 512 Kbps to 5 Mbps, ATM: 25, 45, 155, or 622 MBps and Gigbit Ethernet: 1Gbps
no 25 mbps is up not 100
An internet speed of 100 is fast if it refers to megabits or gigabits per second. If it is a 100 kilobit per second connection, it is very slow and only twice as fast as dial-up.
Broadband is usually 40 to 60 megabytes per second faster, but can range all the way to 300 mbps faster.
Dial up speed cannot be over 5 MBPS. It is extremely slow. The download speed is typically much slower than the internet speed however it does pose for a max. Dial up is not the best for speed especially with downloading. The top speed you can receive will depend on many factors including your computer.