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DOCSIS 3.1 uses channel bandwidths of up to 192 MHz in the downstream. [15] Upstream: DOCSIS 1.0/1.1 specifies channel widths between 200 kHz and 3.2 MHz. DOCSIS 2.0 & 3.0 specify 6.4 MHz, but can use the earlier, narrower channel widths for backward compatibility. DOCSIS 3.1 uses channel bandwidths of up to 96 MHz in the upstream. Modulation:
DOCSIS 1.0 [12] (cable modem) 38/9 Mbit/s: 4.75/1.125 MB/s: 1997 DOCSIS 2.0 [13] (cable modem) 38/27 Mbit/s: 4.75/3.375 MB/s: 2002 VDSL ITU G.993.1: 52 Mbit/s: 7 MB/s: 2001 VDSL2 ITU G.993.2: 100 Mbit/s: 12.5 MB/s: 2006 Uni-DSL: 200 Mbit/s: 25 MB/s: 2006 VDSL2 ITU G.993.2 Amendment 1 (11/15) 300 Mbit/s: 37.5 MB/s: 2015 BPON (fiber optic service ...
DOCSIS RFI 1.1 [16] later added more robust and standardized QoS mechanisms to DOCSIS. DOCSIS 2.0 added support for S-CDMA PHY, while DOCSIS 3.0 added IPv6 support and channel bonding to allow a single cable modem to use concurrently more than one upstream channel and more than one downstream channel in parallel.
DOCSIS 3.0 and lower — 4 Gigabit b/g/n a 2.4 5.0 450 — — — 0 0 0 — — 6.04 FRITZ!Box 6360 Cable Cable DOCSIS 3.0 and lower — 4 Gigabit b/g/n a 2.4 5.0 300 1 USB 2.0 — 2 1 6.5 FRITZ!Box 6430 Cable Cable DOCSIS 3.0 and lower — 4 Gigabit b/g/n 2.4 450 2 USB 2.0 0 2 0 7.30 German version only FRITZ!Box 6810 LTE LTE — 1 Fast b/g/n ...
Under the DOCSIS 3.0 and 3.1 specifications for data over cable TV systems, multiple channels may be bonded. Under DOCSIS 3.0, up to 32 downstream and 8 upstream channels may be bonded. [27] These are typically 6 or 8 MHz wide.
The Multimedia over Coax Alliance (MoCA) is an international standards consortium that publishes specifications for networking over coaxial cable.The technology was originally developed to distribute IP television in homes using existing cabling, but is now used as a general-purpose Ethernet link where it is inconvenient or undesirable to replace existing coaxial cable with optical fiber or ...
You need to be in a pretty remote area to get gigabit speeds 24/7 on Comcast, for example, and prior to DOCSIS 3.1 they were selling 24/8 stream configs of DOCSIS 3.0 as gigabit despite it being beyond the technological capacity after overheads, which they could get away with by using the pre-overhead data speed somewhere in the fine print. I'd ...
Cable modem termination system. A cable modem termination system (CMTS, also called a CMTS Edge Router) [1] is a piece of equipment, typically located in a cable company's headend or hubsite, which is used to provide data services, such as cable Internet or Voice over IP, to cable subscribers.