On 11/6/2010 4:53 PM, Leland Jackson wrote:
> Some interesting trivia:
>
> On a related note, the bandwidth over normal fiber optic cables has been
> quadrupled.  Traditionally,  the binary code was carried in blinks of
> "on" or "off" light, much like morse code could be communicated by flash
> light.
>
> Light has both wave and particle properties, so its both, I guess.  To
> increase the bandwidth of fiber optic cable by a factor of 4, the light
> wave is broken down into four separate frequency ranges.  Each frequency
> range can carry its own binary code as the light wave propagates through
> the fiber optic glass.  This quadruples the bandwidth over fiber optic.
>
> The speed of the light propagating through the fiber optic cable is only
> 66.67% the normal speed of light, (eg C), while the speed of propagation
> through a UTP cable, which uses copper wire, is 90% of C.  Propagation
> through copper wire is faster than propagation through fiber optic.  LOL


So replacing the old copper with fiber optic is making it slower?  lol

-- 
Mike Babcock, MCP
MB Software Solutions, LLC
President, Chief Software Architect
http://mbsoftwaresolutions.com
http://fabmate.com
http://twitter.com/mbabcock16

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