Residential DSL also referred to as ADSL
Asymmetric Digital Subscriber Line was designed to provide higher downstream data rates at the expense of upstream rates. Many typical uses of the Web -- such as file downloads and general web browsing -- benefit from greater downstream bandwidth but require relatively little in the opposite direction.
Universal ADSL (also known as G.Lite) is a form of ADSL that improves on one of the weaknesses of regular ADSL -- installation. Regular ADSL generally requires a technician visit to the client site to install the splitter device that divides the frequency spectrum for voice and data. G.Lite does not require that this splitter be installed, but it does so at the expense of lower data rates. G.Lite supports a maximum of 1,544 kbps (384 kbps upstream) whereas regular ("full-rate") ADSL can support more than 8,000 kbps (as shown earlier).
Another related technology, Rate-Adaptive DSL (RADSL), is an implementation of ADSL that automatically configures the modem at startup to adjust its rate according to the quality of the phone line. Like G.Lite, RADSL supports a much lower maximum date rate (1,088 kbps) than regular ADSL.
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