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  2. G.hn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/G.hn

    Although most elements of G.hn are common for all three media supported by the standard (power lines, phone lines and coaxial cable), G.hn includes media-specific optimizations for each media. Some of these media-specific parameters include: [10] OFDM Carrier Spacing: 195.31 kHz in coaxial, 48.82 kHz in phone lines, 24.41 kHz in power lines.

  3. Ethernet over coax - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ethernet_over_coax

    The first Ethernet standard, known as 10BASE5 (ThickNet) in the family of IEEE 802.3, specified baseband operation over 50 ohm coaxial cable, which remained the principal medium into the 1980s, when 10BASE2 (ThinNet) coax replaced it in deployments in the 1980s; both being replaced in the 1990s when thinner, cheaper twisted pair cabling came to dominate the market.

  4. Gigabit Ethernet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gigabit_Ethernet

    There are five physical layer standards for Gigabit Ethernet using optical fiber (1000BASE-X), twisted pair cable (1000BASE-T), or shielded balanced copper cable (1000BASE-CX). The IEEE 802.3z standard includes 1000BASE-SX for transmission over multi-mode fiber , 1000BASE-LX for transmission over single-mode fiber , and the nearly obsolete ...

  5. Broadband - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Broadband

    One example is the ITU-T G.hn standard, which provides a way to create a local area network up to 1 Gigabit/s (which is considered high-speed as of 2014) using existing home business and home wiring (including power lines, but also phone lines and coaxial cables).

  6. Power-line communication - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Power-line_communication

    While utility companies use microwave and now, increasingly, fiber-optic cables for their primary system communication needs, the power-line carrier apparatus may still be useful as a backup channel or for very simple low-cost installations that do not warrant installing fiber optic lines, or which are inaccessible to radio or other communication.

  7. Carrier Ethernet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carrier_Ethernet

    Point-to-point Ethernet links are carried over SDH/SONET networks, making use of virtual concatenation (ITU-T G.707) and LCAS (Link Capacity Adjustment Scheme - ITU-T G.7042) to create an appropriate size carrier bundle, of the Generic Framing Procedure of SDH equipment, and takes advantage of the management and recovery features of SDH to ...

  8. Smart grid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smart_grid

    NIST has included ITU-T G.hn as one of the "Standards Identified for Implementation" for the Smart Grid "for which it believed there was strong stakeholder consensus". [131] G.hn is standard for high-speed communications over power lines, phone lines and coaxial cables.

  9. Fiber-optic cable - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fiber-optic_cable

    A fiber-optic cable, also known as an optical-fiber cable, is an assembly similar to an electrical cable but containing one or more optical fibers that are used to carry light. The optical fiber elements are typically individually coated with plastic layers and contained in a protective tube suitable for the environment where the cable is used.