Date: Sat, 6 Jul 1996 11:54:57 -0400 From: Charles Henrich <henrich@crh.cl.msu.edu> To: henry@zoo.toronto.edu, freebsd-hardware@freebsd.org Subject: Re: cable vs. ISDN Message-ID: <199607061554.LAA18849@crh.cl.msu.edu> References: <4rm15o$f5k@msunews.cl.msu.edu>
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In lists.freebsd.hardware you write: >> >Cable has a good chance of blowing ISDN away. Much faster and cheaper. And >> >it will be available in many places this year. More, next. >> >> Cable is a pain. It works only one way. If you want to send a large file >> you still have to go slow. And, you still need to be a member of a ISP >> as you can't write to cable, from what I've read. >Depends on how good your local cable system is. The cable-data system >that Rogers Cable is introducing in the Toronto area is two-way (with >symmetrical bandwidth, amazingly enough, or at least that's the way it was >in the prototype system). >Incidentally, harking back to the original theme of this discussion :-), >the hardware used for the Rogers prototype talked to the computers by >Ethernet. I've been using Cable networking for almost a year now here in East Lansing, MI (TCI Cable), and its symmetrical 10Mbps, usually I get an effective throughput rate of about 200KBytes/sec both ways. You can keep your 11K/sec ISDN :) -Crh -- Charles Henrich Michigan State University henrich@msu.edu http://pilot.msu.edu/~henrich
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