DSL Technology Banner

DSL Technology

How does DSL technology allow customers to access the Internet at speeds up to 50 times faster than conventional analog modems and receive a telephone call at the same time?

A special DSL modem, which allows data traffic to move at speeds up to 1.5 Mbps, connects to an ethernet network interface card (NIC) in your PC. The DSL modem then plugs into a customized wall jack connected to the regular telephone wiring inside the building, which consists of a twisted pair of copper wires. At the point where the telephone wire leaves the building on its way to the Nevada Bell Central Office (CO), or the Point of Demarcation, a splitter attaches to the line separating the data and voice traffic.

The digital data and analog voice then travel over telephone lines to a nearby Nevada Bell Central Office (CO). There, the voice service or Plain Old Telephone Service (POTS) is sent to the Public Switched Telephone Network (PSTN). The data traffic is interpreted by special equipment called a DSLAM (DSL Access Multiplexor) and routed over Nevada Bell's robust fiber-optic ATM network to Nevada Bell Internet (see diagram below).

Technology Analog Dial-up ISDN DSL Internet DSL Internet
Downstream Speed 28.8 Kbps 128 Kbps up to 1.5 Mbps up to 6 Mbps
Image File (2 MB) 9.25 minutes 2 minutes 10.36 seconds 2.6 seconds
Complex Image (16 MB) 74 minutes 17 minutes 83 seconds 21 seconds
Short Video (72 MB) 5.55 hours 75 minutes 6 minutes 96 seconds

Return Home
| Home | Home Services | Business Services | Web Hosting |
| Dial In Numbers | FAQ | News | Safety 'Net | Contact Us | Site Map |

Copyright © 2001 Nevada Bell Internet Services. All rights reserved.