A cable modem is a unique type of modem that is designed to modulate a data signal over cable television infrastructure. 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 United States during Q1 2005, up from 17.4 million in Q1 2004. It is also commonly found in Canada and Europe.
Bandwidth of residential cable modem service typically range from 3 Megabits per second (Mbit/s) up to 15 Mbit/s or more. The upstream bandwidth on residential cable modem service usually ranges from 384 Kilobits per second (kbit/s) to 2 Mbit/s or more. There are few attempts to offer different service tiers beyond the traditional 'home' and 'business' designations.
In comparison, DSL tends to offer less speed and more variance between service packages and prices. Service quality is also far more dependent on your location in relation to the telephone company's nearest central office.
There are two traditional disadvantages to cable internet:
CDLP is a proprietary standard made by Motorola. CDLP CPE was capable of both PSTN (telephone network) and RF (cable network) return paths. The PSTN return path cable modem service was considered 'one way cable' and had many of the same drawbacks as satellite internet service, and as a result it quickly gave way to two way cable. Cable modems that used the RF cable network for the return path were considered 'two way cable', and were better able to compete with DSL which was bidirectional. The standard is more or less defunct now with new providers using and existing providers having changed over to the DOCSIS standard. The Motorola CDLP Proprietary CyberSURFR is an example of a modem that was built to the CDLP standard, capable of a peak 10 Mbit/s downstream and 1.532 Mbit/s. (CDLP supported a maximum downstream bandwidth of 30 Mbit/s which could be reached by using several modems.)
The Australian ISP BigPond employed this system when it started cable modem trials in 1996. For a number of years cable Internet access was only available to Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane via CDLP. This network ran parallel to the newer DOCSIS system for a number of years. In 2004 the CDLP network was switched off and now is exclusively DOCSIS.
With the advent of Voice over IP telephony, cable modems can also be used to provide telephone service. Many people who have cable modems have opted to eliminate their Plain Old Telephone Service (POTS). Because most telephone companies do not offer naked DSL (DSL service without a POTS line), many VoIP users prefer cable modems.
VoIP and other new data services that require broadband Internet access are driving demand for increased bandwidth delivery via cable modems. As of 2005, several national cable systems in the United States have announced plans to upgrade their networks to meet this demand.
An alternative to cable modems is the Embedded Multimedia Terminal Adapter (EMTA or E-MTA). An EMTA allows MSOs to offer both High Speed Internet and VoIP through a single piece of customer premise equipment.
Broadband | Networking hardware | Internet access | Digital cable
Kablovski modem | Kabelmodem | Cablemódem | Modem câble | Modem Kabel | אינטרנט בכבלים | Kabelmodem | Kabelmodem | Modem kablowy | Kaapelimodeemi | Kabelmodem
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