Q:
What is DSL?
A: Digital
Subscriber Line provides high speed internet and voice service
using only one phone line. At home or at work, you get a fast
connection to the Internet and your phone line can be used to
make or get calls while you're online.
A simple explanation is that DSL
works like a high pitched dog whistle. The DSL modem can hear
the high frequency part of the signal, while a splitter or micro-filter
prevents you from hearing the DSL 'chatter' on the voice part
of the call.
DSL uses all of the total capabilities
of the local phone loop, which is why it's a distance sensitive
service. (That is, you've got to be within 2~2½ miles of the
telephone central office.)
Think of this analogy: You can hear
the fire whistle almost anywhere you live in town, but you've
got to be very close to the fire station to hear the sirens
on the fire trucks. In this analogy, the voice portion your
phone line is like the town's big fire whistle, you can hear
it for miles and miles. The sirens on the trucks are like the
DSL signal, you've got to be close enough to the fire truck
to hear them.
Q: How
fast is DSL?
A: The chart below gives
you a comparison. A T-1 (pronounced tee-one) is a high speed
digital connection used by businesses that are directly connected
to the Internet and have high speed data needs. Even with a
T-1, most businesses still use 256k or less. The base speed
for DSL, (which is really ADSL; asymmetrical DSL) is
512k. That's going to be plenty of speed.
On the whole, the Internet is 128k
speed. There are some sites that are faster, but 128k is about
what you get most days. (Trust us on this, we've been measuring
the Internet for years.)
There is just no way that even big,
popular sites like www.cnn.com
or even www.aol.com go much
faster than 128k on a Wednesday or Sunday night. Our competitors
talk big talk, but the average user's normal speed is going
to be 128k, which is still 4 times faster than 56k dial-up,
if you're getting a solid 45.3 to 52k dial-up rate. Here's a
little chart to put this all in perspective.
The point of all this is that
the whole Internet can only go as fast as the slowest part.
You can have a tricked out Porsche 911 Turbo, but if you're
stuck in traffic, or behind a string of a hundred '82 Ford
Escorts with two nearly flat tires, you're going to go their
speed.
The other thing that can slow
you down is how much connectivity there is to the rest of
Internet, and how that network is designed. Brightnet has
the most robust network in northern Indiana. Our competitors
are just talk in' trash if they say otherwise.
Q: What
can you do with DSL?
A: DSL allows
you to do everything you do with dial up Internet service,
just a lot faster. Surf the net faster. Download files faster.
Watch videos or hear music on your computer faster, or with
higher quality. DSL saves you time when you're online.
Q:
Will my computer work on DSL?
A: Probably, if you have:
Pentium 200 computer
or faster
Windows 95 release 2.0
(or higher)
64 Megs of RAM and 300
Megs of free disk space
Internet Explorer 4.0 /
Netscape 4.7 (or higher)
A 10 or 100 base-T network
interface card (or USB port)
Q: What
do you recommend?
I'm not sure what to do.
A: It doesn't cost
you anything to send us your phone number and other information
on this form. We'll
check and tell you by e-mail whether you can get DSL or not.
We won't ever sell your name or
e-mail address, and you won't get mail you don't want. If
you aren't in an area where DSL is available, the e-mail reply
will tell you about other services you can consider.