ADSL
I believe your Internet Service Provider must sell you this option. Once you pay for it your router should be working at the speed of ADSL. I am currently using ADSL, but will be going to a faster speed.
54Mwireless Router
When talking about an ADSL modem wireless router, the acronym stands for asynchronous digital subscriber line. The DSL portion of the router name denotes that it accepts connections from a DSL line. When the router is specified as being asynchronous, it refers to the differences in the speed of uploads and downloads. ADSL routers generally download much faster than they send information, sometimes as much as 10 or 20 times faster. This only becomes an issue for applications such as video conferencing or playing online games, where upload speeds are important for a smooth experience.
A lot of the high speed broadband services feature a faster download speed, that an upload speed. This is fairly common and is called asymmetric. xDSL, aka digital subscriber line, has ADSL which is asymmetric, and SDSL with is symmetric. The download and upload speeds are the same for SDSL, and the download speed is faster with ADSL, but the upload speeds are slower. My cable connection for data, for instance, is 20mbps down, and only 1.5mbps up. This is an asymmetric plan.
Speed is the difference between HDSL and ADSL. HDSL has high upload and download speeds whereas ADSL has a slow upload speed coupled with a high download speed.
A lot of the high speed broadband services feature a faster download speed, that an upload speed. This is fairly common and is called asymmetric. xDSL, aka digital subscriber line, has ADSL which is asymmetric, and SDSL with is symmetric. The download and upload speeds are the same for SDSL, and the download speed is faster with ADSL, but the upload speeds are slower.My cable connection for data, for instance, is 20mbps down, and only 1.5mbps up. This is an asymmetric plan.Read more: What_system_uses_one_upload_speed_and_a_faster_download_speed
Drivers for an Alice ADSL router can be found from software download sites such as CNET Download. The drivers are also available in Alice's official website.
Yes, you have to have an ADSL splitter before your router to route the packets from the Internet. There are numerous router which have an inbuilt ADSL supporting varying speeds like 54Mbps etc etc. You can choose one from them if you do not want to have separate ADSL and Router installed separately.
The download speed is typically the faster speed offered on broadband connections to the Internet. Most data plans for high speed broadband services feature a faster download speed, that an upload speed. This is fairly common and is called asymmetric. xDSL, aka digital subscriber line, has ADSL which is asymmetric, and SDSL with is symmetric. The download and upload speeds are the same for SDSL, and the download speed is faster with ADSL, but the upload speeds are slower. My cable connection for data, for instance, is 20mbps down, and only 1.5mbps up. This is an asymmetric plan which is fairly affordable, however, if I tried to garner a faster upload speed, my rate plan goes up substantially for what appears to be a small increase in upload speed (nearly double the monthly cost for a mere 768k faster on upload speed) and for some connections purchasing more upstream/upload speed isn't even an option as it is restricted due to the distance you are from the drop (as is the case with xDSL technology).
ADSL - If you think of the connection you buy from your Broadband whoever-ink, as the ADSL. DSL - From your tele socket, you need a splitter, that you can poke 2 cables into: 1 for your phone, and one to go INTO THE ROUTER (this is an dsl cable). The router (as the name suggests routes your internet traffic from differnet PC's at your site or home. via radio or network cable). You may need to set your router up, details are supplied with your broadband package. You are given one IP (a number computer number to talk in the world of networks) address (for this reason you can generally only have one router). Your router then hands out its own IP addresses to your networked printers, pc's, cctv. also generally on a DHCP. (dynamic host - so your IP number can change if its nabbed by something else, or runs out). BADMAN
yes you can