Modems modulate and demodulate analog carrier signals to encode and decode digital data for transmission. Early modems transmitted data over telephone lines at speeds up to 300 bits per second. Through the 1960s, modem technology advanced with new standards providing faster transmission speeds of 1200 to 2400 bits per second through techniques like phase-shift keying. Further innovations in echo cancellation and error correction allowed speeds to increase to 9600 and 14400 bits per second by the 1990s.
Modems modulate and demodulate analog carrier signals to encode and decode digital data for transmission. Early modems transmitted data over telephone lines at speeds up to 300 bits per second. Through the 1960s, modem technology advanced with new standards providing faster transmission speeds of 1200 to 2400 bits per second through techniques like phase-shift keying. Further innovations in echo cancellation and error correction allowed speeds to increase to 9600 and 14400 bits per second by the 1990s.
Modems modulate and demodulate analog carrier signals to encode and decode digital data for transmission. Early modems transmitted data over telephone lines at speeds up to 300 bits per second. Through the 1960s, modem technology advanced with new standards providing faster transmission speeds of 1200 to 2400 bits per second through techniques like phase-shift keying. Further innovations in echo cancellation and error correction allowed speeds to increase to 9600 and 14400 bits per second by the 1990s.
Modems modulate and demodulate analog carrier signals to encode and decode digital data for transmission. Early modems transmitted data over telephone lines at speeds up to 300 bits per second. Through the 1960s, modem technology advanced with new standards providing faster transmission speeds of 1200 to 2400 bits per second through techniques like phase-shift keying. Further innovations in echo cancellation and error correction allowed speeds to increase to 9600 and 14400 bits per second by the 1990s.
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Modem
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
For other uses, see Modem (disambiguation).
[hide]This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. This article needs additional citations for verification. (October 2010) This article possibly contains original research. (March 2012)
Acoustic coupler modem A modem (modulator-demodulator) is a device that modulates an analog carrier signal to encode digital information and demodulates the signal to decode the transmitted information. The goal is to produce a signalthat can be transmitted easily and decoded to reproduce the original digital data. Modems can be used with any means of transmitting analog signals, from light emitting diodes to radio. A common type of modem is one that turns the digital data of a computer into modulated electrical signal for transmission over telephone lines and demodulated by another modem at the receiver side to recover the digital data. Modems are generally classified by the amount of data they can send in a given unit of time, usually expressed in bits per second (symbol bit/s, sometimes abbreviated "bps"), or bytes per second (symbol B/s). Modems can also be classified by their symbol rate, measured in baud. The baud unit denotes symbols per second, or the number of times per second the modem sends a new signal. For example, the ITU V.21 standard used audio frequency shift keying with two possible frequencies, corresponding to two distinct symbols (or one bit per symbol), to carry 300 bits per second using 300 baud. By contrast, the original ITU V.22 standard, which could transmit and receive four distinct symbols (two bits per symbol), transmitted 1,200 bits by sending 600 symbols per second (600 baud) using phase shift keying. Contents [hide] 1 Dialup modem o 1.1 History 1.1.1 Acoustic couplers 1.1.2 Carterfone and direct connection 1.1.3 The Smartmodem and the rise of BBSs 1.1.4 1200 and 2400 bit/s 1.1.5 Proprietary standards 1.1.6 Echo cancellation, 9600 and 14,400 1.1.6.1 Error correction and compression 1.1.7 Breaking the 9.6k barrier 1.1.7.1 V.34/28.8k and 33.6k 1.1.7.2 V.61/V.70 Analog/Digital Simultaneous Voice and Data 1.1.8 Using digital lines and PCM (V.90/92) 1.1.9 Using compression to exceed 56k 1.1.9.1 Compression by the ISP 1.1.10 Softmodem 1.1.11 List of dialup speeds o 1.2 Popularity 2 Radio Routers o 2.1 WiFi and WiMax 3 Mobile broadband modems 4 Broadband o 4.1 Residential Gateways 5 Home networking 6 Deep-space communications 7 Voice modem 8 Brands 9 See also 10 References 11 External links Dialup modem[edit] History[edit]
TeleGuide terminal News wire services in the 1920s used multiplex devices that satisfied the definition of a modem. However the modem function was incidental to the multiplexing function, so they are not commonly included in the history of modems. Modems grew out of the need to connect teleprinters over ordinary phone lines instead of the more expensive leased lines which had previously been used for current loopbased teleprinters and automated telegraphs. In 1942, IBM adapted this technology to their unit record equipment and were able to transmit punched cards at 25 bits/second. [citation needed]
Mass-produced modems in the United States began as part of the SAGE air-defense system in 1958 (the year the word modem was first used [1] ), connecting terminals at various airbases, radar sites, and command-and-control centers to the SAGE director centers scattered around the U.S. and Canada. SAGE modems were described by AT&T's Bell Labs as conforming to their newly published Bell 101 datasetstandard. While they ran on dedicated telephone lines, the devices at each end were no different from commercial acoustically coupled Bell 101, 110 baud modems. In summer 1960 [citation needed] , the name Data-Phone was introduced to replace the earlier term digital subset. The 202 Data-Phone was a half-duplex asynchronous service that was marketed extensively in late 1960 [citation needed] . In 1962 [citation needed] , the 201A and 201B Data- Phones were introduced. They were synchronous modems using two-bit-per-baud phase- shift keying (PSK). The 201A operated half-duplex at 2,000 bit/s over normal phone lines, while the 201B provided full duplex 2,400 bit/s service on four-wire leased lines, the send and receive channels each running on their own set of two wires. The famous Bell 103A dataset standard was also introduced by AT&T in 1962. It provided full-duplex service at 300 bit/s over normal phone lines. Frequency-shift keying was used, with the call originator transmitting at 1,070 or 1,270 Hz and the answering modem transmitting at 2,025 or 2,225 Hz. The readily available 103A2 gave an important boost to the use of remote low-speed terminals such as the Teletype Model 33 ASR and KSR, and the IBM 2741. AT&T reduced modem costs by introducing the originate-only 113D and the answer-only 113B/C modems.