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One of the popular high speed Internet alternatives for sale in the United States (and through the world), Digital Subscriber Line (DSL) Internet provides millions and countless people who have broadband connections to the web. Significantly faster than dial up (Internet connections that use a telephone modem), DSL is also supplied through phone lines - unlike cable or satellite Internet. Speeds on DSL habitually range anywhere between 500 - 6000 kb per second, which is anywhere between 200 and 400 times faster than typical narrowband or modem-based connections. Nearly completely supplied by telephone companies (both locally owned along with national corporations), DSL lines use the very same telephone lines that have previously been installed throughout your house to provide the broadband connection but just after they have been plugged into a DSL modem. This modem converts the Internet connection from the analog signal into a digital one that can then be fed directly into computers or Internet accessible devices, or right back into a DSL wireless router to share the signal with no wires. Of the broadband services accessible, DSL is usually the most affordable choice. Nevertheless, it also is widely considered to be the one of the slower broadband services out there, as cable Internet is usually 3 to 4 times as fast as DSL and fiber optic can be many multiples of that! You'll need to contact your local Internet providers and phone companies to find out whether or not DSL service can be found locally, and additionally might want to discover whether or not it's speed and broadband capacities will fit your special needs. I.e. DSL. |