From where the Broadband internet service providers get internet.?
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05-24-2014, 04:23 AM
Post: #1
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From where the Broadband internet service providers get internet.?
I would like to know the answer for the question, from where the broadband internet service providers get internet?
Do they get directly from satellite or by some other modes. Can any one please explain me about this ..........with some examples. thanks for you help in advance Ads |
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05-24-2014, 04:32 AM
Post: #2
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your question is somewhat not clear.
Do you mean, how does an internet provider provide to the internet? Ads |
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05-24-2014, 04:48 AM
Post: #3
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Hi,
Broadband service provider get internet from bandwidth providers , satellite, Telecom companies like Verizon and BT using routers. Hope this answer your question Good Luck. |
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05-24-2014, 05:01 AM
Post: #4
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The Internet began as a network
funded by the US government to support projects within the government and at universities and research laboratories in the US – but grew over time to include most of the world's large universities and the research arms of many technology companies.[1][2][3] Use by a wider audience only came in 1995 when restrictions on the use of the Internet to carry commercial traffic were lifted. [4] See also: Internetization In the early to mid-1980s, most Internet access was from personal computers and workstations directly connected to local area networks or from dial-up connections using modems and analog telephone lines . LANs typically operated at 10 Mbit/s and grew to support 100 and 1000 Mbit/s, while modem data-rates grew from 1200 and 2400 bit/s in the 1980s, to 28 and 56 kbit/s by the mid to late 1990s. Initially dial-up connections were made from terminals or computers running terminal emulation software to terminal servers on LANs. These dial- up connections did not support end- to-end use of the Internet protocols and only provided terminal to host connections. The introduction of network access servers (NASs) supporting the Serial Line Internet Protocol (SLIP) and later the point-to- point protocol (PPP) extended the Internet protocols and made the full range of Internet services available to dial-up users, subject only to limitations imposed by the lower data rates available using dial-up. Broadband Internet access, often shortened to just broadband and also known as high-speed Internet access, are services that provide bit-rates considerably higher than that available using a 56 kbit/s modem. In the US National Broadband Plan of 2009, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) defined broadband access as "Internet access that is always on and faster than the traditional dial-up access", [5] although the FCC has defined it differently through the years.[6] The term broadband was originally a reference to multi-frequency communication, as opposed to narrowband or baseband . Broadband is now a marketing term that telephone, cable, and other companies use to sell their more expensive higher-data-rate products. [7] Broadband connections are typically made using a computer's built in Ethernet networking capabilities, or by using a NIC expansion card . |
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05-24-2014, 05:13 AM
Post: #5
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Through Satellites.
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