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Megabit

T3 Internet Service – One of the Fastest in the World

If you are thinking of the fastest speed possible then a T3 Internet service can provide you with the same. This service is also known as DS-3 and has a speed of forty-five Megabits per second through a dedicated line.

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Be the first to comment - What do you think?  Posted by s1mpleton - June 7, 2010 at 11:41 AM

Categories: Bit, Bits, bits per second, Broadband, Connection, Data, DSL, DSL Connection, ink, Internet, Internet Service, IT, Megabit, Megabits, Net, pos, Security, Service, Speed, Speeds, T3, Tech, Technology, Uncategorized   Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

What You Should Know About T3 Internet Service

Speed matters, and if you are wanting the fastest then going in for a T3 Internet service would be a good idea. Alternately known as the DS-3, this dedicated line service has a whopping speed of forty five Megabits per second. Once you have subscribed to the service you do not have to bother about how reliable the transfer of data is going to be or safety issues.

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Be the first to comment - What do you think?  Posted by - at 11:25 AM

Categories: ATT, Bit, Bits, bits per second, Data, Internet, Internet Service, IT, lte, Megabit, Megabits, Net, Other, Service, Speed, T3, Uncategorized, WAN   Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Internet T1 Line ISP Solutions

After the connection is finalized you will be able to get fast Internet speeds.

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Be the first to comment - What do you think?  Posted by - December 3, 2009 at 8:03 AM

Categories: 1, Bit, Bits, bits per second, Broadband, Business, Connection, Internet, Internet Speed, IT, Megabit, Megabits, Net, Port, Provider, Speed, Speeds, T1, T1 Line, Work   Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Virgin Speeds up Mobile Broadband – Computer Weekly

Virgin Media has given its mobile broadband product a couple of espressos.

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Be the first to comment - What do you think?  Posted by Telecom Consultant - December 1, 2009 at 5:55 AM

Categories: Bit, Bits, bits per second, Broadband, Broadband Technology, IT, Megabit, Megabits, Mobile, Tech, Technology   Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

Applications For DS3 Bandwidth

Given the bandwidth intensive applications currently present today in most companies .... DS3 bandwidth is a logical choice for an upgrade or new install of a voice/data network for your company. DS3 bandwidth delivers the speed, reliability, scalability, and performance companies need to do business ...

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Be the first to comment - What do you think?  Posted by - November 25, 2009 at 5:13 AM

Categories: 1, 11, 911, Applications, ATT, Backbone, Bandwidth, Bit, Bits, bits per second, bps, Broadband, Business, Byte, Bytes, Cable, Call Center, Carrier, Channel, Channels, Circuit, Company, Computer, Connection, Conversation, CoS, Data, Data and Voice, Database, Databases, Digit, Digital, Disaster Recovery, DS1, DS3, DS3 Bandwidth, DS3 Line, DS3 Lines, E3, Fiber, Frame Relay, Google, High Bandwidth, High Speed, High Speed Internet, Home, Internet, Internet Connection, Internet Service, Internet Service Provider, IP, IPL, ISP, IT, Kbps, LAN, LED, MAN, MB, Mbps, Megabit, Megabits, Net, Network, Network Traffic, Networking, Office, Point to Point, Port, PRI, Provider, Server, Service, Service Provider, Speed, Speeds, System, T1, T1 Connection, T1 Line, T1 Lines, T3, T3 connection, Traffic, Video, Video Conferencing, Voice, VPN, Work   Tags: , , , , , , , ,

Copper Thrives In The 21st Century

Alexander Graham Bell loved copper wire. His Bell Telephone Company and others strung it on poles and buried it in the ground until there were thousands upon thousands of miles of small gauge copper wire connecting nearly every home and business.

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Be the first to comment - What do you think?  Posted by - November 22, 2009 at 10:19 PM

Categories: 000, 1, 1.5 Mbps, Alexander Graham Bell, Analog, Analog Signal, ATT, Bandwidth, Bell, Bit, Bonded T1, Bonded T1 Line, Bonded T1 Lines, bps, Broadband, Business, Cable, Cables, Circuit, Company, Connection, Copper, Copper Wire, CoS, Digit, Digital, DSL, DSL Technology, EoC, Equipment, Ethernet, Ethernet over Copper, Fiber, Fiber Optic, Fiber Optic Cable, Frequencies, Glass, Google, High Speed, Home, HTML, Integrated T1, Internet, Internet Access, Internet Service, IP, IPL, ISDN, IT, Kbps, LAN, LEC, LED, Loop, MAN, MB, Mbps, Megabit, Modem, Net, Network, Phone, Phone Company, Phone Line, Phone Lines, Phone Service, PHP, PHY, Port, PRI, SAN, Service, Speed, T1, T1 Line, T1 Line Service, T1 Lines, T1 PRI, T1 Service, T3, Tech, Technology, Telecom, Telephone, Telephone Company, Telephony, Voice, WAN, Work, WWW   Tags: , , , , , , , , , , ,

Broadband Internet For High Speed and Fast Internet Connection

Broadband Internet delivers high-speed Internet connections in various bandwidths with varying data rates, which can range from 64 kilobits per second to 1 megabits per second. This article discusses broadband service, its benefits, the various types and lots more.

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Be the first to comment - What do you think?  Posted by - November 16, 2009 at 6:35 AM

Categories: 1, Bandwidth, Bit, Bits, bits per second, Broadband, Broadband Service, Connection, Data, Data Rates, Internet, Internet Connection, Internet Connections, IT, Kilo, Kilobit, Kilobits, Megabit, Megabits, Net, Service, Speed   Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , ,

What Is A Terabit Per Second? Tbit/s; Tb/s; Tbps: Helpful Information

To help you understand the relationship these terms have with each other, the following information is given. A kilobit per second refers to a unit of the transfer rate of data equivalent to 1,000 bits per second or 125 bytes per second. A megabit per second refers to a unit of the transfer rate of data equivalent to 1,000,000 bits per second or 125,000 bytes per second. A gigabit per second refers to a unit of the transfer rate of data equivalent to 1,000,000,000 bits per second or 125,000,000 bytes per second. A terabit per second refers to a unit of the transfer rate of data equivalent to 1,000,000,000,000 bits per second or 125,000,000,000 bytes per second.

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Be the first to comment - What do you think?  Posted by Steve Sramek - October 17, 2009 at 10:22 AM

Categories: Bit, Byte, Cable, Data, Digit, Fiber Cables, Gigabit, Google, Kilobit, Medical Images, Megabit, MRI, New Technologies, Optical, TB/s, Tbit/s, TBps, Technology, Telecommunications, Terabit, Transmission   Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Understanding Terabit Per Second; Tbit/s; Tb/s; Tbps

A kilobit/second is the smallest quantity transfer rate, being 1,000 bits/sec or 125 bytes/second. A megabit/second is a transfer rate of 1,000,000 bits/second or 125,000 bytes/second. A gigabit is a transfer rate of 1,000,000,000 bits/per second or 125,000,000 bytes per second, and a megabit is a transfer rate of 1,000,000,000,000 bits/second or 125,000,000,000 bytes/second.

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Be the first to comment - What do you think?  Posted by Telecom Consultant - at 9:07 AM

Categories: Bit, Byte, Data, Digit, Gigabit, Kilobit, Megabit, TB/s, Tbit/s, TBps, Technology, Telecommunications, Terabit, Transmission, Uncategorized   Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Moore’s Law Effect on Networking

Moore's Law is a well known part of history of Intel.  Lesser known is how that impacts the networking world.  Many of the features of modern Ethernet are offload workloads from the processor(s).  The effect of Moore's law is that the CPU gets faster at doing those workloads at the same rate that the Ethernet controller does.  At Intel, we learned that lesson with our PRO/100 Smart adapter and it really came home with our PRO/100 Intelligent adapter.  These are older 10/100 megabit adapters and they were offloading IPX workloads.  The cards had processors on board to put together IPX data streams and move the data into the memory of the host system.  The PRO/100 Smart came out just as the Intel486™   to Pentium® processor transition was happening.  The 486 and this new thing called PCI bus , really couldn't handle the 100Mb workloads.  The Smart moved the datagram assembly into the coprocessor and things were good (on the early Pentiums at least).  However, as the same cards went into faster buses and faster systems, the net improvements went down.  We upgraded the PRO/100 Smart into the PRO/100 Intelligent with a faster coprocessor and Ethernet controllers (not to mention almost half the size) but things didn't reflect as well as we had hoped.  The Pentium II processor was out and the PCI chipsets had gained significant performance since their introduction.  Even with the coming Gigabit transition, we could see the writing on the wall.  The power of the coprocessor would never be more than the gains of power of the processor via Moore's law.  The data offload would work for one generation, then be made worthless by the next processor.  We looked into making a third generation offload card for the Gigabit generation, but we figured out that within six months of launch, another Intel CPU would come out to remove any performance advantage the offloads created. Software was already a problem since the operating system likes to control things like the network interface.  When data movement is offloaded from the domain of the O/S, it can take a lot of work with the O/S vendor.  With our IPX offloads, that just meant working with Novell* .  They were very willing partners.  But not all vendors and O/S teams are like that.  Because the code that runs on the coprocessor is closed source, it can have very limited acceptance in open source engagements.  The code on the coprocessor would also be subject to defects that could be harder to fix in the field than a driver issue.  Nobody really likes having to get new firmware.  Not to mention what could happen if an exploit was in the offload code.  With the O/S in charge, the risk of exploits can be limited since the admin can close off ports, or hand patch the exploit.  In the coprocessor model, you are at the mercy of the adapter vendor.  And the only mitigation is to either turn off the coprocessor (which may not always be an option) or remove or shutdown the card.  Not something our customer support people were very happy about having to recommend.            The return on investment calculation was easy when we looked at it.  Moore's Law would always put our coprocessor to reduced effectiveness almost by the time the card shipped.  The software model was easy on paper, but the realities of O/S vendors, exploit risks and field upgrades made it very complex.  No matter how many we shook the magic 8 ball, all signs pointed to No

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Be the first to comment - What do you think?  Posted by - October 16, 2009 at 3:55 PM

Categories: 1, ALU, ATT, Bit, Code, Community, Connectivity, CoS, Data, Data Streams, Ethernet, faq, fyi, GE, Gigabit, hardware, Home, Host, Internet, IP, IPL, IT, Latency, LEC, LED, MAN, MB, Megabit, Net, Network, Networking, Operating System, Partners, Patch, PC, PCI, Port, Ports, SLA, Software, System, Tech, Technology, Third Generation, Uncategorized, Work, WWW   Tags: , , , , , , , ,

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