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Asymmetrical communications

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Q: What Occurs when downstream throughput is higher than upstream throughput?
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What is asymmetrical communication?

In asymmetrical communication, downstream throughput is higher than upstream throughput.


Which types of dsl provide higher transmission rates on downstream connections that on upstream connections?

Asymmetric dsl (ADSL) Rate-adaptive DSL (RADSL)


Can earth fault current go up passing through the downstream panel and directly cause a trip at the upstream panel which have higher set point of earth fault protection?

If the fault is a direct short to ground, the fault current can be high enough to trip the upstream protection.


How glaciers and rivers affect rocks?

glaciers move them downhill and scratch the surface of the valley from a river 'v' to a glacial 'u' they also move lots of rocks. rivers move rocks downstream the higher upstream the more rough and sharp edged they are, downstream they are smoother and rounder due to erosion.


In twisted-pair wire how does the twist ratio affect transmission?

(1) the higher the twist, the higher the throughput (2) The higher the twist, the the lower the crosstalk


Why is lower Canada called lower Canada when it's really higher?

It's not based on the location on a map. It is more geographical. The "lower Canada region" is more upriver on the St Lawrence. The higher up the river, the "lower" you are. Upper Canada or "Ontario" is located at the tip of the river. Settlers arrived through the St Lawrence and believed the entrance to the river was lower, and the end of the river was higher. ============================================================ "Upper Canada" and "Lower Canada" were named because of their relative elevations and their relative locations on the St Lawrence watershed. Upper Canada was upstream, and at a higher elevation; Lower Canada was downstream, and at a lower elevation.


What are the negative aspects of hydroelectricity?

Changes both upstream and downstream habitat to both water and land Can displace people - sometimes 100,000s Can impact fish migration patterns Puts canyons under water and sometimes destroys recreation areas Much higher levels of water evaporation


Actual data throughput is usually higher on wireless networks?

Data is usually higher in wired network then wireless. This is because to is plugged directly in.


Advantages and disadvantages of vertical merger?

Note: "integration" and "merger" are the same Benefits of Vertical integrationVertical integration potentially offers the following advantages:Reduce transportation costs if common ownership results in closer geographic proximity.Improve supply chain coordination.Provide more opportunities to differentiate by means of increased control over inputs.Capture upstream or downstream profit margins.Increase entry barriers to potential competitors, for example, if the firm can gain sole access to a scarce resource.Gain access to downstream distribution channels that otherwise would be inaccessible.Facilitate investment in highly specialized assets in which upstream or downstream players may be reluctant to invest.Lead to expansion of core competencies.Drawbacks of Vertical integrationWhile some of the benefits of vertical integration can be quite attractive to the firm, the drawbacks may negate any potential gains. Vertical integration potentially has the following disadvantages:Capacity balancing issues. For example, the firm may need to build excess upstream capacity to ensure that its downstream operations have sufficient supply under all demand conditions.Potentially higher costs due to low efficiencies resulting from lack of supplier competition.Decreased flexibility due to previous upstream or downstream investments. (Note however, that flexibility to coordinate vertically-related activities may increase.)Decreased ability to increase product variety if significant in-house development is required.Developing new core competencies may compromise existing competencies.Increased bureaucratic costs.


Is throughput always less than bandwifth?

Throughput in megabits per second will always be equal to or less than the bandwidth in megabits per second (it can't be higher). Throughput decreases as latency increases. For instance if you send a file to your neighbor two houses down the latency should be very low (assuming you are on the same network). However, if you send it to another city the latency will be higher and while your bandwidth remains the same, your throughput will decrease due to the latency between the locations. Note that this can be improved by optimizing the TCP window size on your computers. There is a free TCP optimizer program available on the web if you search on that term.


Which is better higher Mbps or lower Mbps?

It is desirable to have a higher Mbps in almost all cases. Mbps = Mega bits per second. It describes the throughput (or bandwidth) or data through a network interface.


When earthquake occurs where would the intensity be higher?

The intensity would be higher near the epicenter.