DSL is through your telephone lines and broadband is through cable lines.
2007-02-26 03:00:35
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answer #1
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answered by sara w 2
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DSL uses advanced compression technology to squeeze as much bandwidth as possible out of a standard phone line. It is comparatively slow compared to the speed of most broadband connections which can attain speeds far and above DSL over cable lines or even sat elite. Broadband is more expensive and normally needed for high bandwidth demands like offices which need lots of upload and download speed for large files and people who play real time games online. DSL is fine if your a casual user and don't need your files to open in a split second and don't plan on playing any real time graphics intensive multiplayer online games.
2007-02-26 03:01:58
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answer #2
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answered by bigtjeeper 2
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uneven digital Subscriber Line (ADSL) is one in each and every of those DSL, a wisdom communications technologies that enables swifter records transmission over copper telephone traces than a prevalent voiceband modem provides. It does this by skill of making use of frequencies that are actually not utilized by skill of a voice telephone call.[a million] A splitter - or microfilter - enables a single telephone connection for use for the two ADSL service and voice calls on a similar time. ADSL can often in basic terms be dispensed over short distances from the crucial place of work, oftentimes under 4 kilometres (2 mi),[2] yet has been prevalent to exceed 8 kilometres (5 mi) if the initially-laid cord gauge facilitates farther distribution. DSL or xDSL, is a kinfolk of technologies that supplies digital records transmission over the wires of an area telephone community. DSL initially stood for digital subscriber loop, besides the fact that these days, the term digital subscriber line has been broadly accompanied as a extra merchandising-friendly term for ADSL, that's the main wide-unfold version of shopper-waiting DSL. DSL would be utilized on a similar time and on a similar telephone line with common telephone, because it makes use of intense frequency, mutually as common telephone makes use of low frequency. oftentimes, the acquire velocity of shopper DSL centers levels from 256 kilobits according to 2d (kbit/s) to 24,000 kbit/s, counting on DSL technologies, line situations and repair point carried out. oftentimes, upload velocity is under acquire velocity for uneven digital Subscriber Line (ADSL) and equivalent to acquire velocity for the rarer Symmetric digital Subscriber Line (SDSL).
2016-10-16 12:50:18
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answer #3
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answered by shakita 4
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Broadband can be adsl or dsl. Dsl is connect to phone line, adsl are connect to cable line. Check with your service provider for the speed and cost than you can decide which is cheaper.
2007-02-26 03:22:10
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answer #4
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answered by Lim S 2
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DSL, digital subcrisber line, or ADSL, asymmetric digtal subscriber line, IS broadband. they mean the same thing.
however, some people refer to internet through a BT line as DSL, ADSL, or BROADBAND and refer to internet down a cable line as broadband, cable broadband or fibre optic internet.
2007-02-26 03:04:57
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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DSL (or ADSL in the home) is just one type of broadband.
Other types include Cable modem, ISDN (high capacity), Satellite, WiFi, WiMax, T3 line, T1 line, Backbone (basically direct feed into the master internet servers)....though the high capacity lines probably have a different name than broadband (eg. superband?)
2007-02-26 03:13:30
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answer #6
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answered by PKblue 2
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Broadband is a high transmission transfer technology and DSL is one of them. Other Popular Broadband connection is cable modem.
Pls. see this article: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Broadband_Internet_access
Hope that helps.
M.
2007-02-26 03:02:18
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answer #7
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answered by Martin G. 4
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DSL is through your telephone lines and broadband is through cable lines.
2007-02-26 03:07:46
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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There isn't.
DSL - Digital Subscribers Line..in which data is transferred.
2007-02-26 02:58:02
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answer #9
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answered by APIDLady 2
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look here for full details
http://www.itsolutions.co.uk/adsl.htm#whatbroadband
2007-02-26 03:33:47
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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