The maximum bandwidth is 11 Mbps. If the transmission quality is bad, the bandwidth will automatically be reduced to 5.5, 2, or 1 Mbps. The range depends on the equipment used, as well as anything that may block part of the signal, such as trees or walls. According to one Wikipedia article, typical ranges are 35 meters indoors, and 140 meters outdoors.
We can say that : Vulnerable bits = data rate x burst duration = 1500 x 2 x 10^-3 = 3 bits
144 kbps
As far as I concern, both of them are the same. Throughput rate: is the amount of data per second that can be transferred. Transmission rate: is also the amount of data that could be transmitted onto the communication link per second.
The rate that an OC3 can move data is at 155Mbps. For more answers go to. http://www.intelletrace.com/internet-services/OC3-Internet-Services.html
1. Preferable to *what*?2. BER indicates how often corrupted frames/packets will need to retransmitted, and thus the likely "goodput" (actual data rate vs potential data rate) will be.Ask the question more exactly for a more exact answer.
802.11a, the maximum data rate is up to 54Mbps 802.11b, the maximum data rate is up to 11Mbps 802.11g, the maximum data rate is up to 54Mbps 802.11n, the maximum data rate is up to 150Mbps
2 times data rate
IEEE 1394b can transfer at a maximum rate of 786.432 Mbit/s.
the maximum data rate for ISDN BRI is 128 Kbps -Big-Elk
10 MPbps
1.5 gb/s
802.11b
1000 Mbps
Data transfer rate (also called bandwidth)
Data Transfer Rates states the maximum speed at which data can be read/write onto the storage disk.
data can be transferred at a maximum rate of 1000 Mbps data transmission can be via UTP or fiber optic cabling
data can be transferred at a maximum rate of 1000 Mbps data transmission can be via UTP or fiber optic cabling