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how does ADSL router/switch work?
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Thread : how does ADSL router/switch work?
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Hello there..
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The ADSL router is actually an ADSL modem and a router integrated together. And it should be called an internet gateway. The modem is transparent to the network and only does the work of converting digital to analog signal (I don't remember if TDM is in ADSL spec, you better go read something on ADSL spec). And the router is the part that muxes the connections of several computers inside your network together using NAT (for typical residential gateway/router).
I haven't heard of router that will get slower when there're a lot of computers connect to it. It will happen though if some computers hog the line of course. EDIT: BTW, a network device that is transparent in a network is called a bridge (level 1 (OSI) device). Message edited by thuan on 04-17-2008 at 03:03:06 PM |
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As Grumpy put it, NAT is what most home routers use to manage internal hosts through a single external connection. It just repackages your packet headers so that the Web only sees the external IP (cable/DSL modem) and all response packets are matched up (similar to how sockets work between PCs on a LAN) to the correct internal IP vs. source IP.
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