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modems

A modem, short for modulator-demodulator, is a device that enables digital data to be transmitted over analog communication channels by converting digital signals into analog form for transmission and converting received analog signals back into digital form. Modems are used over telephone lines, cable systems, fiber-optic networks, and wireless channels. In home networks, they are often combined with routing functionality to form a single gateway device.

Historically, consumer modems emerged in the 1960s to provide dial-up internet access, with early speeds measured

Common types include dial-up modems for analog telephone lines; DSL modems that use high-frequency service on

Modulation methods encode digital data into signals for transmission; demodulation recovers the original data at the

in
bits
per
second.
Advances
in
modulation
techniques
and
access
technologies,
such
as
frequency-shift
keying,
phase-shift
keying,
and
later
quadrature
amplitude
modulation,
yielded
higher
speeds.
New
access
technologies,
including
DSL,
cable
modem
standards
(DOCSIS),
and
fiber-based
solutions,
expanded
broadband
options.
Today,
many
networks
rely
on
always-on
connections
where
the
modem’s
primary
role
is
to
interface
with
the
service
provider’s
network.
existing
phone
lines;
cable
modems
that
share
a
coaxial
distribution
network;
fiber
modems
or
optical
network
terminals
used
in
passive
optical
networks;
and
wireless
or
cellular
modems
that
connect
via
mobile
networks.
Some
devices
combine
a
modem
with
a
router,
Wi-Fi
access
point,
or
network
switch,
forming
a
gateway.
receiving
end.
Modern
modems
support
link
establishment
protocols,
speed
negotiation,
error
detection,
and
secure
management.
Standards
such
as
DOCSIS
for
cable
and
various
DSL
specifications
guide
performance
and
interoperability.