SLIP compression...

John F. Haugh II jfh at rpp386.Dallas.TX.US
Wed Jul 12 23:08:40 AEST 1989


In article <11771 at ulysses.homer.nj.att.com> smb at ulysses.homer.nj.att.com (Steven M. Bellovin) writes:
>The problem with putting compression in the modem is that you're
>still limited by the 9.6Kbps or 19.2Kbps pipe from the CPU to the
>modem.  (Assuming an external modem, of course.)

Putting compression in the modem will make it more tolerant [ depending
on modem technology that is ... ] of noisy operating environments.

Consider a data stream being compressed 50 percent.  As the quality
of the link degrades, the utilization may increase from 50 percent,
which it was limited to by the baud rate at the modem interface.  The
utilization rate is able to increase until the modem is once again
operating at the interface speed, or the the [ very ] noisy line
limits the data rate at the interface.

At some point in time it would be nice if a hardware vendor would
create a bidirectional parallel interface and put a modem on it.
That company would probably earn quite a few dollar$ doing $o.
-- 
John F. Haugh II                        +-Quote of the month club: ------------
VoiceNet: (512) 832-8832   Data: -8835  | "Computer security is to information
InterNet: jfh at rpp386.cactus.org         |  control as a chastity belt is to
UucpNet : <backbone>!bigtex!rpp386!jfh  +- birth control"    -- Doug Steves  --



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