High Speed For The Office
If you need to have high speed internet, you should look into a good t1 line connection with a good t1 line bandwidth. Telecommunication carriers can help with you having fast internet service. These t1 lines are also wonderful if you are in a business. If your office has a T1 line, it means that the phone company has brought a fiber optic line into your office. A T1 line can carry 24 digitized voice channels, or it can carry data at a rate of 1.544 megabits per second. If the T1 line is being used for telephone conversations, it plugs into the office's phone system. If it is carrying data it plugs into the network's router.
T1 lines can carry about 192,000 bytes per second: roughly sixty times more data than a normal residential modem. It is also extremely reliable. It is actually much more reliable than an analog modem.
Depending on what they are doing, a T1 line can generally handle quite a few people. For general browsing, hundreds of users are easily able to share a T1 line comfortably. If they are all downloading MP3 files or video files simultaneously it would be a problem, but that still is not extremely common.
The majority of us are familiar with a normal business or residential line from the phone company. A normal phone line like this is delivered on a pair of copper wires that transmit your voice as an analog signal.
If you use a normal modem on a line like this, it can transmit data at perhaps 30 kilobits per second (30,000 bits per second).
Phone companies move almost all voice traffic as digital rather than analog signals. In addition, the analog line gets converted to a digital signal by sampling it 8,000 times per second at 8-bit resolution (64,000 bits per second). Nearly all digital data now flows over fiber optic lines, and the phone company uses different designations to talk about the capacity of a fiber optic line.
A T1 line cost depends on who provides it and where it goes. The other end of the T1 line needs to be connected to an ISP, and the total cost is a combination of the fee the phone company charges and the fee the ISP charges.
A large company needs something more than a T1 line. The following table shows some of the common line designations:
DS0 - 64 kilobits per second
ISDN - Two DS0 lines plus signaling (16 kilobits per second), or 144 kilobits per second
T1 - 1.544 megabits per second (24 DS0 lines)
T3 - 43.232 megabits per second (28 T1s)
OC3 - 155 megabits per second (100 T1s)
OC12 - 622 megabits per second (4 OC3s)
OC48 - 2.5 gigabits per seconds (4 OC12s)
OC192 - 9.6 gigabits per second (4 OC48s)



