Archive for Broadband

NetGear Rangemax 240

NetGear announced yesterday the release of a new wireless router, a notebook adapter and a USB 2.0 adapter, making up the RangeMax 240 family.

The RangeMax 240 is built with Airgo Networks’ third generation faster-than-ethernet MIMO wireless chips, promising real-world throughput of 115 Mbps, or faster than wired Ethernet.

The WAP (initially priced at $199 for the US market) and the notebook adapter ($129) will be in stores in time for the holidays, the USB adapter to follow in early 2006.

Exciting to see wireless technology playing catchup with its wired equivalent. I can’t wait till we see Gigabit wireless!

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Securing your WLAN access point

Wireless Internet access is ever so convenient; no need for messy ethernet cables when sitting with your wifi-enabled laptop in the sofa relaxing. This convenience can come at a price though. Your wireless access point (WLAN access point, WAP) could probably do with some locking down, especially if you’ve never even visited the administration interface of it.

Most WLAN access points are NOT secure out of the box.
Consult your WAP manual and make sure you at least do the following:

  • Enable password protection/change default password for administration interface
  • Enable logging
  • Disable broadcasting of SSID
  • Enable WEP (Wired Equivalency Privacy).
    This encrypts data transmitted over the air. WEP has flaws which can be exploited, but it’s still better than no encryption at all.
  • Use MAC access control list.
    This makes sure your access point only talks to your computers. You may find a record of your computer’s MAC address in the WAP log (you did enable logging, didn’t you?)
  • Disable remote SNMP
  • Turn off your wireless access point when not in use.

For additional protection:

  • Turn off any file- and printer sharing on your computer.
  • Install a personal firewall.
  • Install anti-virus software and keep it updated.
  • Make sure you have the latest patches for your operating system.
  • Look into deploying some sort of VPN-solution between computers connected via WLAN and your gateway.

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Cable modem

From the Wikipedia Cable modem article:

A cable modem is a special type of modem that is designed to modulate a data signal over cable television infrastructure.

The term cable Internet access (or simply cable) refers to the delivery of Internet service over this infrastucture.

Cable modems should not be confused with older LAN systems such as 10base2 or 10base5 that used coaxial cables — and especially not with 10broad36, which actually utilized the same sort of cable as CATV systems.

Cable modems are primarily used to deliver broadband Internet access, taking advantage of unused bandwidth on a cable television network.

There were 22.5 million cable modem users in the U.S. during Q1 2005. That’s up from 17.4 million in Q1 2004.

Along with digital subscriber line technology, cable modems ushered in the age of broadband Internet access in developed countries. Prior to the availability of such systems, Internet access involved slow dial-up access over a public switched telephone network.

Users in a neighborhood share the available bandwidth provided by a single coaxial cable line. Therefore, connection speed can vary depending on how many people are using the service at the same time.

Often the idea of a shared line is seen as a weak point of cable Internet access. From a technical point of view, all networks, including DSL services, are sharing a fixed amount of bandwidth between a multitude of users — but because cable networks tend to be spread over larger areas than DSL services, more care must be taken to ensure good network performance.

A more significant weakness of cable networks using a shared line is the risk of loss of privacy, especially considering the availability of hacking tools for cable modems. This issue is addressed by encryption and other privacy features specified in the DOCSIS (Data Over Cable Service Interface Specification) standard used by most cable modems.

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The “Triple Play” in Communications Gear

BusinessWeek online has an article on triple play:

The merging of voice, data, and video represents “a new dynamic,” says S&P’s Ken Leon, who likes Motorola and Scientific Atlanta

The shares of communications-equipment makers have been stuck in low gear for the last few years, hampered mostly by customers’ reduced spending and consolidation of telecom- and cable-services providers. The move by these operators to offer voice, data, and video — a so-called triple play — as well as the ability to have those services move across fixed and mobile networks, could finally translate into better times for equipment suppliers. “We believe the industry is coming into a new dynamic,” predicts Ken Leon, who follows the group for Standard & Poor’s Equity Research.

More at BusinessWeek online …

More on Triple play.

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How DSL works

From the WikiPedia Digital Subscriber Line article:

The Public Switched Telephone Network was initially designed to carry POTS calls, as the concept of data communications as we know it today did not exist. For reasons of economy, the system nominally passes audio between 300 and 3,400 Hz, which is regarded as the range required for human speech to be clearly intelligible. This is known as commercial bandwidth. Dial-up services using modems are constrained by the POTS channel’s Shannon capacity, which indicates the maximum data rate which can be supported by a given amount of bandwidth.

At the Local Exchange (UK terminology) or Central Office (US terminology) the speech is generally digitised into a 64 kbit/s data stream in the form of an 8 bit signal using a sampling rate of 8,000 Hz, therefore any signal above 4,000 Hz is not passed by the phone network (and has to be blocked by a filter to prevent aliasing effects). The bandwidth between the commercial bandwidth limit and the channel limit can be utilised in a fully digital end to end connection to achieve a full 64 kbit/s on an ISDN line.

The local loop connecting the central office to most subscribers is capable of carrying frequencies well beyond the 3.5 kHz upper limit of POTS. Depending on the length and quality of the loop, the upper limit can be as high as the tens of megahertz. DSL takes advantage of this unused part of the circuit by creating 4312.5 Hz wide channels starting between 10 and 100 kHz, depending on how the system is configured. Each channel is evaluated for usability in much the same way an analog modem would on a POTS connection. Allocation of channels continues at higher and higher frequencies (up to 1.1 MHz for ADSL) until new channels are deemed unusable. More usable channels equates to more available bandwidth, which is why distance and line quality are a factor. The pool of usable channels is then split into two groups for upstream and downstream traffic based on a preconfigured ratio. Once the channel groups have been established, the individual channels are bonded into a pair of virtual circuits, one in each direction. Like analog modems, DSL transceivers constantly monitor the quality of each channel and will add or remove them from service depending on whether or not they are usable.

The commercial success of DSL and similar technologies largely reflects the fact that in recent decades, while microchips and disk drives have been getting faster and cheaper, the cost of digging holes in the ground remains very high. All flavors of DSL employ very complex digital signal processing algorithms to overcome the inherent limitations of existing POTS wires. Not long ago, the cost of such signal-processing power would have been prohibitive, but today the cost of installing DSL for an existing local loop, with a DSLAM at one end and a DSL modem at the other end, is orders of magnitude less than would be the cost of installing a fiber-optic cable over the same route and distance.

Most residential and small-office DSL implementations reserve low frequencies for POTS service, so that with suitable filters and/or splitters the existing voice service continues to operate independent of the DSL service. Thus POTS-based communications, including FAX machines, can share the wires with DSL. However, in most cases only one DSL modem can use a local loop at a time; it is generally not possible for a customer to have multiple DSL connections over a single local loop. As of 2005, the standard way to let multiple computers share a broadband connection is to purchase an inexpensive router that establishes a local Ethernet or Wi-Fi network on the customer’s premises.

Once upstream and downstream channels are established, they are used to connect the subscriber to a service such as Internet access.

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