Cable Internet is a form of broadband Internet access that uses the cable television infrastructure. Like digital subscriber lines and fiber optic networks, cable Internet bridges the last kilometre or mile from the Internet provider to the subscriber'
Many people who have cable TV can now get a high-speed connection to the Internet from their cable provider. Cable modems compete with technologies like asymmetrical digital subscriber lines (ADSL).
television channel would take up quite a bit of electrical "space," or bandwidth, on a cable. In reality, each television signal is given a 6-megahertz (MHz, millions of cycles per second) channel on the cable. The coaxial cable used to carry cable television can carry hundreds of megahertz of signals.Downstream, which goes toward the user, bit rates can be as much 50 megabits per second for business connections, and two to twenty megabits for consumers depending on the country. Upstream, which goes from the user, rates range from 384Kbit/s to more than 20Mbit/s.
Broadband cable Internet access requires a cable modem at the customer premises and a CMTS (Cable Modem Termination System) at a cable operator facility (typically a headend or hub location).
Putting both upstream and downstream data on the cable television system requires two types of equipment: a cable modem on the customer end and a cable modem termination system (CMTS) at the cable provider's end.


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