Yes, but the quality isn't not going to be good. It's kind of like driving a Golf cart on a highway; it'll get you where you need to go but it's not exactly the optimal form of transportation. 384 or 512 kbps would be much, much better (or 1.5 to 2 Mbps IP)
128 kbps, no; 128 KB/s, yes. Youtube needs at least 512 kbps, or 64KB/s.
Set a cost of 1 for the T-1 and a cost of 5 for the 128-kbps link
Kbps means Kilobits per second KB/s means Kilobytes per second kbps - KB/s 64 - 8 128 - 16 256 - 32 512 - 64 1024 - 128
Bonding.
It depends. Even though the 320 kbps is higher quality you might not be able to hear any difference between 320 and 192 kbps if your speaker or headphones aren't good enough. You could try www.mp3ornot.com, where you can try hearing the difference between 128 and 320 kbps-files. If you can't hear any notable difference there, you won't a notable difference between 192 and 320.
Holds up to 10 hours of video Holds up to 10,000 photos Holds up to 1,750 songs in 128-Kbps AAC format
Maximum speed supported by ISDN BRI is 128 Kbps
14,000 songs in 128-Kbps AAC format.
Dial-Up: 56 kbps DSL: 128 kbps - 8 mbps Cable: up to 400 mbps 2G: 384 kbps 3G: 3.6 mbps 3.5G: 14.4 mbps 4G: 21 mbps
PSTN dial-up
the maximum data rate for ISDN BRI is 128 Kbps -Big-Elk
(128 kbps) * 1 hour = 56.25 megabytes