Spontaneous All American 27372 Posts user info edit post |
What comes after fiber optics in terms of wired bandwidth connectivity? 5/5/2008 1:53:23 PM |
poopface All American 29367 Posts user info edit post |
MS DOS 5/5/2008 1:53:53 PM |
ReceiveDeath INEED2 GET HIRITENOW 70283 Posts user info edit post |
WHOO! 5/5/2008 1:54:05 PM |
chembob Yankee Cowboy 27011 Posts user info edit post |
Subspace, human.
5/5/2008 1:54:28 PM |
Aficionado Suspended 22518 Posts user info edit post |
whatever system the borg use 5/5/2008 1:54:30 PM |
poopface All American 29367 Posts user info edit post |
DOW JONES 5/5/2008 1:54:45 PM |
wwwebsurfer All American 10217 Posts user info edit post |
Bigger cables... Light is the absolute fastest way to move a signal, and works for practically endless distances without signal degradation. The current limits are in the 4Gb/s range, which is also nearing the processing limit of internal computer components (buses, processors, memory). Unless you're doing something like switching or just moving the data 4Gb/s is going to pretty well cap you out.
EDIT: If you're wanting a faster connection at your house and a fiber connection isn't cutting it, you may want to look into a load balancer. I know that TWC used to cap their fiber links to something like 250Mb/s, so with a nice 4 channel or 8 channel load balancer you can get up in the Gb/s ranges. Expect to spend around $300/line + 20-30K on equipment.
[Edited on May 5, 2008 at 1:59 PM. Reason : a] 5/5/2008 1:56:51 PM |
killpups All American 945 Posts user info edit post |
I concur. 5/5/2008 2:04:27 PM |
Skack All American 31140 Posts user info edit post |
The medium isn't capping your bandwidth...The cable company is. You're getting only a small fraction of the bandwidth that can be carried over copper wire. There is no reason to even think about running optical into homes anytime soon. 5/5/2008 2:09:15 PM |
Spontaneous All American 27372 Posts user info edit post |
I don't know. Verizon FiOS sounds pretty awesome.
btw, Skack ftw! 5/5/2008 2:36:10 PM |