| L. P. Seidman, "Satellites for wideband access," IEEE Communications Magazine, pp. 108-- 111, Oct. 1996. |
....through to mass storage in order to store a substantial part of R n . The following considerations demonstrate that this system is on the verge of being practical. The broadcast channel could be realized by a satellite. Typically, current communications satellites have a capacity of 1 10 Gbit s [25]. Commercial satellite communications services offer broadcast data rates up to 0.8 Gbit s at consumer electronics prices. Far more capacity is offered by fiber optical networks [12] The test bed of the All Optical Networking Consortium, for example, has a capacity of 1 Tbit s and has been ....
L. P. Seidman, "Satellites for wideband access," IEEE Communications Magazine, pp. 108-- 111, Oct. 1996.
Online articles have much greater impact More about CiteSeer.IST Add search form to your site Submit documents Feedback
CiteSeer.IST - Copyright Penn State and NEC