Making Sense of Your Connectivity Options
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Transcript Making Sense of Your Connectivity Options
Making Sense of Your
Connectivity Options
Paul Kleeberg, M.D.
American Academy of Family
Physicians Scientific Assembly
October 3rd, 2003
New Orleans
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Objectives
Understand the different methods of connecting
to the Internet
Know the benefits, limitations and approximate
cost of each method
Know how multiple computers can share one
connection
Know how these techniques can be applied in
your home or office
Know how to set up a secure wireless network
in your home or office
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Outline
Connecting to the Internet
POTS, ISDN, DSL, cable, satellite and
dedicated leased lines
Sharing an Internet connection
Sharing a dial-up, DSL or cable connection
Building ethernet networks: wired and
wireless
Comparing the options
Conclusion
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POTS: Plain Old Telephone
Service
Uses the standard phone line
User dials up the ISP to make a
connection
Speeds said to be 56K but always slower
Internet (IP) address is assigned at the
time of the call
Requires minimal hardware and setup
Costs about $14 to $20 / month for
unlimited use
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POTS
Advantages
Available from
anyplace
Easy set up
Easy to switch ISP
Useful when traveling
All new computers
can use it
Disadvantages
Slow
Dialing-up and
connecting is slow
Ties up phone line
Intermittent
connections
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ISDN: Integrated Service
Digital Network
Digital version of dial-up telephone
Installed by local phone company
Requires an ISDN card in the PC or an
external “modem”
A digital call is made at the time of “need”
Reliable speeds of 64-128K
Internet access (ISP) a separate cost
$45 metered, $120 unlimited use / mo.
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ISDN
Advantages
Fast dialing (~1.5 sec)
Easy to switch ISPs
ISP can connect to you
(extra cost)
Available in some
locations where
alternatives are not
Disadvantages
Expensive
Intermittent connections
Requires add’l hardware
Requires new wiring
Metered by phone co and
sometimes the ISP
Difficult to get installed
Works only at the site of
installation
Limited availability
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DSL: Digital Subscriber
Line
Runs over ordinary telephone wires
Digital signals use high frequencies not
used by analog phones
Installed by local phone company
Reliable download speeds of 128K to 7M
Always on
Internet access (ISP) a separate cost
Monthly cost $22 for 256K to $275 for 7M
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DSL
Advantages
Always on
Flat fee
Reliable
Requires no new wiring
Does not tie up phone
line
Fixed IP available
Can be used to host a
web site
Dial-up access when
traveling often included
Disadvantages
Can be tough to switch
ISPs
Requires additional
hardware (DSL Router)
Can be difficult to get
installed
Works only at the site of
installation
Limited availability
Fast upload speeds cost
more
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Cable
Runs over cable TV wiring
Installed by cable company
Download speeds of 768K to 3M and higher
Upload speeds slower, about 300K
Always on
Shared bandwidth - the more people on it, the
slower it is
Unlimited use with Internet access (ISP)
included in cost
Costs about $50 per month
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Cable
Advantages
Usually quite fast
Always on
Flat fee
Somewhat reliable
Broader availability
Does not interfere with
TV
Disadvantages
Shared bandwidth
Requires additional
hardware (cable box)
Works only at the site of
installation
Upload slower than
download
No choice in cable
company or ISP
Dial-up access when
traveling not always
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included
Satellite
Available from remote locations
Two providers: Direcway and Starband
Downloads about 1M. Upload via satellite
up-link up to 100K.
Costs: Installation ~$200 plus:
Single Win98SE or better machine: unlimited
service $70/mo hardware $500
Networked machines (any OS): unlimited
service$150/mo hardware $600
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Satellite
Advantages
Disadvantages
Available anyplace
that has a view of the
southern sky
Always on
Unlimited access
Hardware and
installation costs
Shared bandwidth
Can be slow when
using a Virtual Private
Network (VPN)
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Dedicated Leased Line
Fixed digital connection
Bidirectional access at guaranteed speeds
Speeds range from 56K to T1 (1.5M) on
up
Always on, unmetered
ISP is a separate charge
Fees:
56K $80/mo, with ISP $300/mo
1.5M T1 $250/mo, with ISP $1500/mo
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Dedicated Leased Line
Advantages
The most reliable
connection to the Internet
Guaranteed bandwidth
and service levels
Great for hosting a web
site or for managing your
own security and firewalls
56K available anyplace
there is a telephone
Disadvantages
Expensive
T1 and higher access
confined to metro.
Extremely expensive in
rural areas
Difficult to get installed
Not easy to switch ISPs
Requires dedicated
hardware
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Sharing an Internet
Connection
Use one Internet connection to allow
access by several machines
Products available for dial-up (POTs), DSL
and cable
Most products also include a firewall
increasing security
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Sharing a Dial-up
Connection
Advantages
Disadvantages
Cheap
Uses only one phone
line
Any number of
computers can share
one line
Can be used with a
network
Slow. Same problem
as POTS
Speed slows as more
attempt to use the
line at the same time
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Sharing a DSL or Cable
Line
Share a single DSL or cable line with any
number of computers
Can be used with a wired, wireless or
mixed network.
Can be used to share a single Internet
(IP) address on an existing network.
Hardware starts at $80
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Sharing a DSL or Cable
Line
Advantages
Always on
Uses only one DSL or
Cable connection
Any number of computers
can access the Internet
simultaneously
Computers inside can be
invisible to the outside
A computer inside can be a
web server for the Internet
Disadvantages
Requires extra
hardware
Requires a network
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Building Networks
Wired Ethernet
Advantages
Very high speed: 10,
100 and 1000M
More secure requires a physical
connection
Disadvantages
Running wires
Laptop needs a wire
Wireless (WiFi)
Advantages
High speed 11M (802.11b)
and higher (802.11a & g)
Wiring unnecessary
Use with any computer
Laptops not tethered
Many laptops are wirelessready
Disadvantages
May require a PC Card
Requires extra steps to
increase security
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Wireless
Connections to
the Internet
Networks
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Comparing the Options
DSL
Cable Satellite 56K
POTS
ISDN
<56K
128K
<56K
128K
No
Yes-No
Cost/mo
~$20
$45-$120
FixedIP
ISP cost
Hardware
Install
Availability
No
Avail
$0
$40-$150
$25
$0
~$0
$600
often incl
~$0
~$25
wide
wide
Feature
Download
Speed
Upload
Speed
Metered
<128K- <768K~1M
3M
1.5M-7M
<128<256384K~100K
384K
1.5M
No
No
No
$70 single
$22$50-$90
$150 ntwk
$275-$?
AddХl $
AddХl $
Often
T-1
56K
1.5M
56K
1.5M
No
No
$80+
$250
Yes
Yes
$0
$300
$1500
incl
$500-600
$1500
$1500
~$0
~$0
~$200
$380
$1750
growing
growing
wide
wide
urban
All costs are approximate
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Useful Links
Handouts from this lecture with additional links:
http://fpen.org/aafp/connect.html
Home networking information from Linksys:
http://www.linksys.com/edu/
Home networking information from Microsoft
http://www.microsoft.com/insider/networking/
The owners' manual for the broadband wireless
router demonstrated in class:
ftp://ftp.linksys.com/pdf/wrt54gv1.1_ug.pdf
Webopedia: An encyclopedia of technology
terms http://webopedia.internet.com/
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