Method and apparatus for efficient improved data...

Telephonic communications – Telephone line or system combined with diverse electrical... – Having transmission of a digital message signal over a...

Reexamination Certificate

Rate now

  [ 0.00 ] – not rated yet Voters 0   Comments 0

Details

C379S093080, C375S222000

Reexamination Certificate

active

06396911

ABSTRACT:

AREA OF THE INVENTION
The invention generally relates to the area of telephonic data transmission facilities. More particularly, the present invention concerns methods and apparatuses for improving the signal quality, and thus data rate, of telephonic links between service provider modems and subscriber client modems.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The V.90 (56 Kbps) modem protocol was introduced with much fanfare by manufactures, and Internet users rushed out to get their hands on the answer to their frustrations arising from slow downloads of information from the Internet via Internet service providers (ISPs). Before, the V.90 protocol was introduced, the highest speed for such data transfers was 33.6 Kbps via V.34 protocol modems. The V.90 modems are theoretically capable of receiving data from a sender at about a 50% faster rate. However, theory and reality are two very different concepts. This has certainly been the case with V.90 modems.
As many disappointed users of 56 Kbps modems discovered, having the fastest telephone-based client modem on the Internet does not mean that the user's computer will receive information from an Internet service provider at the highest theoretically available data rate. The best client modems on the market today are theoretically capable of receiving data from ISPs using the V.90 protocol at a rate of over 50 Kbps and sending data using the V.34 protocol at a rate of over 33 Kbps. However, when a user of these state-of-the-art modems attempts to remotely connect to an ISP server advertised to support V.90 connections, the user's lofty expectations of high speed transmissions are brought down to earth when the user receives notification from the computer that the connection was established (negotiated) at a lower speed than the expected rate of over 50 Kbps. For example, rather than 50 Kbps, the user's modem connects at a receive rate less than 40 Kbps, a speed much closer to the 33.6 Kbps of last year's clearance shelf modems.
Who is responsible for the owners of V.90 client modems inability to connect to an ISP V.90 server modem at the maximum bit rate? It's not the ISP's fault. The V.90 ISP modems today are indeed capable of transmitting at the maximum rate under the V.90 protocol—about 50 Kbps. Manufacturers of V.90 modems are not to blame either. The modem is indeed capable, under favorable conditions, to accurately receive data in accordance with the V.90 protocol at an effective transfer rate of over 50 Kbps.
In actuality no one is wholly responsible for V.90 modems present performance shortcomings in the real world. The problem arises from the fact that developers of the V.90 protocol pushed the capabilities of twisted pair copper wire, the primary means for transmitting telephone signals from central offices to end-users, to its limit. Having done so, the V.90 protocol works in a noise-free laboratory environment and under certain, limited, uses outside the laboratory—such as when a user is within shouting distance of the central office (CO) of its telephone service provider. This is not a likely scenario for most users of V.90 client modems. In fact, the problem of less than ideal telephone signal transmission media creates problems for Internet subscribers at even lower transmission speeds using the older V.34 protocol having greater noise margins.
The source of the problem is the marketplace's unquenchable thirst for high speed data transmission. Both the providers and the receivers of information want data transmissions to occur at substantially higher rates than the transmission rates when the telephone companies laid their massive networks of local subscriber lines. However, the high performance transmitters and receivers cannot make up for a transmission media that simply cannot satisfactorily transmit the information at such a high rate, over the required distances, under real world circumstances—including noise, interference, and power limitations. The solution rests in the hands of the parties responsible for transmitting the signals from the ISPs to the users—the phone companies. To that end, the phone companies could scrap the old twisted wire for optic fiber and coaxial cable. Such solutions are extremely costly and require overhauling the twisted wire network laid down by phone companies over several decades. As a result, achieving the maximum data transmission rates using V.90 modems is not a likely event for many, if not most, typical phone service customers.
Today, “pair gain” technology provides enhanced digital data transmission over twisted pair copper lines between central offices (COs) and end-users. Pair gain technology uses the pre-existing twisted pair copper wire technology and transmission media. However, pair gain systems apply their own set of data transmission protocols, including A/D and D/A conversion at the central office and end-user connections, respectively. An advantage of pair gain systems provided to phone companies is the ability of phone companies to add phone lines without increasing the number of twisted pair wires for a given area served by a single twisted pair. A single twisted pair line can be transformed from handling a single phone line to one handling two or more phone lines.
Another advantage of pair gain systems is that they provide enhanced signal transmission quality over the twisted wire media. In particular, known pair gain systems are capable of transmitting digitized data over longer distances, and with fewer errors than standard analog transmissions over the same twisted pair transmission media. One such provider of pair gain systems is Charles Industries, Ltd., 5600 Apollo Drive, Rolling Meadows, Ill.
However, even pair gain systems cannot overcome some shortcomings of twisted wire phone networks that were initially intended to convey, using an analog signal, a recognizable voice rather than errorless digital information. As a result, by the time a data signal from a V.90 ISP modem reaches the central office terminal of a pair gain system, the signal has been degraded by passes through one or more analog telephone switches. The central office terminal of the pair gain system converts the analog signal from the central office switch to a digital signal. The remote terminal (at the telephone subscriber's location) converts the digital signal from the central office terminal back to the analog signal transmitted by the central office switch. Inserting the A/D and D/A conversion by the pair gain system into the transmission path between the ISP and the telephone service subscriber causes a signal loss that prevents successful transmission of data between ISPs and users at the maximum available rate under the V.90 protocol.
Providing a solution to the aforementioned problem undoubtedly requires some form of upgrade of existing signal transmission technology. Upgrading such technology typically involves added costs for equipment. However, not every customer will likely need the upgraded line connection all the time—if at all. In fact, customers who do not intend to reap the benefits of improved modem line service from a phone service provider may in-fact complain if they are made to share the added cost of providing premium line service to phone service customers.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention improves the quality and accuracy of data transmissions in order to overcome some, if not all, of the problems encountered when attempting to realize the advertised capabilities of the present state-of-the-art voice band modems. The method and apparatus of the present invention seeks to provide a high precision, reliable, and economically practical high-speed link between server modems and subscriber client modems connected by a path that includes at least one analog transmission link. In particular, the high-speed link is only provided to those who only wish to have access to the service. Furthermore, the high-speed link apparatus is shared by multiple potential users on a floating basis. Therefore, for a pair gain system servin

LandOfFree

Say what you really think

Search LandOfFree.com for the USA inventors and patents. Rate them and share your experience with other people.

Rating

Method and apparatus for efficient improved data... does not yet have a rating. At this time, there are no reviews or comments for this patent.

If you have personal experience with Method and apparatus for efficient improved data..., we encourage you to share that experience with our LandOfFree.com community. Your opinion is very important and Method and apparatus for efficient improved data... will most certainly appreciate the feedback.

Rate now

     

Profile ID: LFUS-PAI-O-2853943

  Search
All data on this website is collected from public sources. Our data reflects the most accurate information available at the time of publication.