
A modulator-demodulator, or simply a modem, is a
hardware device that converts data from a digital format, intended for communication directly between devices with specialized wiring, into one suitable for a
transmission medium such as telephone lines or radio. A modem
modulates one or more
carrier wave signals to encode
digital information for transmission, and
demodulates signals to decode the transmitted information. The goal is to produce a
signal that can be transmitted easily and decoded reliably to reproduce the original digital data.
Modems can be used with almost any means of transmitting analog signals, from
light-emitting diodes to
radio. A common type of modem is one that turns the
digital data of a
computer into a modulated
electrical signal for transmission over
telephone lines, to be demodulated by another modem at the receiver side to recover the digital data.
Speeds
Modems are frequently classified by the maximum amount of data they can send in a given
unit of time, usually expressed in
bits per second (symbol bit/s, sometimes abbreviated "bps") or rarely in
bytes per second (symbol B/s). Modern broadband modems are typically described in megabits.
Historically, modems were often classified by their
symbol rate, measured in
baud. The baud unit denotes symbols per second, or the number of times per second the modem sends a new signal. For example, the ITU V.21 standard used
audio frequency-shift keying with two possible frequencies, corresponding to two distinct symbols (or one bit per symbol), to carry 300 bits per second using 300 baud. By contrast, the original ITU V.22 standard, which could transmit and receive four distinct symbols (two bits per symbol), transmitted 1,200 bits by sending 600 symbols per second (600 baud) using
phase-shift keying.
Many modems are variable-rate, permitting them to be used over a medium with less than ideal characteristics, such as a telephone line that is of poor quality or is too long. This capability is often adaptive so that a modem can discover the maximum practical transmission rate during the connect phase, or during operation.
Overall history
Modems grew out of the need to connect
teleprinters over ordinary phone lines instead of the more expensive leased lines which had previously been used for
current loop–based teleprinters and automated
telegraphs. The earliest devices that satisfy the definition of a modem may be the multiplexers used by
news wire services in the 1920s.
In 1941, the
Allies developed a voice encryption system called
SIGSALY which used a
vocoder to digitize speech, then encrypted the speech with one-time pad and encoded the digital data as tones using frequency shift keying. This was also a digital modulation technique, making this an early modem.
Commercial modems largely did not become available until the late 1950s, when the rapid development of computer technology created demand for a method of connecting computers together over long distances, resulting in the
Bell Company and then other businesses producing an increasing number of computer modems for use over both switched and leased telephone lines.
Later developments would produce modems that operated over
cable television lines,
power lines, and various
radio technologies, as well as modems that achieved
much higher speeds over telephone lines.
Dial-up
A dial-up modem transmits computer data over an ordinary
switched telephone line that has not been designed for data use. This contrasts with
leased line modems, which also operate over lines provided by a telephone company, but ones which are intended for data use and do not impose the same signaling constraints.
The modulated data must fit the frequency constraints of a normal voice audio signal, and the modem must be able to perform the actions needed to connect a call through a telephone exchange, namely: picking up the line, dialing, understanding signals sent back by phone company equipment (dialtone, ringing, busy signal,) and on the far end of the call, the second modem in the connection must be able to recognize the incoming ring signal and answer the line.
Dial-up modems have been made in a wide variety of speeds and capabilities, with many capable of testing the line they're calling over and selecting the most advanced signaling mode that the line can support. Generally speaking, the fastest dialup modems ever available to consumers never exceeded 56 kbit/s and never achieved that speed in both directions.
The dial-up modem was once a widely known technology, since it was mass-marketed to consumers in many countries for
dial-up internet access. In the 90's, tens of millions of people in the United States used dial-up modems for internet access.
Dial-up service has since been largely supplanted by
broadband internet, which typically still uses a modem, but of a very different type which may still operate over a normal phone line, but with substantially relaxed constraints.
History
1950s

Mass production of telephone line modems in the United States began as part of the
SAGE air-defense system in 1958, connecting terminals at various airbases, radar sites, and command-and-control centers to the SAGE director centers scattered around the United States and
Canada.
Shortly afterwards in 1959, the technology in the SAGE modems was made available commercially as the
Bell 101, which provided 110 bit/s speeds. Bell called this and several other early modems "datasets."
1960s
Some early modems were based on
touch-tone frequencies, such as Bell 400-style touch-tone modems.
The
Bell 103A standard was introduced by
AT&T in 1962. It provided full-duplex service at 300 bit/s over normal phone lines.
Frequency-shift keying was used, with the call originator transmitting at 1,070 or 1,270
Hz and the answering modem transmitting at 2,025 or 2,225 Hz.
The 103 modem would eventually become a de facto standard once third-party (non-AT&T modems) reached the market, and throughout the 1970s, independently made modems compatible with the Bell 103 de facto standard were commonplace. Example models included the
Novation CAT and the
Anderson-Jacobson. A lower-cost option was the
Pennywhistle modem, designed to be built using readily available parts.
Teletype machines were granted access to remote networks such as the
Teletypewriter Exchange using the Bell 103 modem. AT&T also produced reduced-cost units, the originate-only 113D and the answer-only 113B/C modems.
1970s
The ''201A'' ''Data-Phone'' was a synchronous modem using two-bit-per-symbol
phase-shift keying (PSK) encoding, achieving 2,000 bit/s half-duplex over normal phone lines. In this system the two tones for any one side of the connection are sent at similar frequencies as in the 300 bit/s systems, but slightly out of phase.
In early 1973,
Vadic introduced the ''VA3400'' which performed full-duplex at 1,200 bit/s over a normal phone line.
In November 1976, AT&T introduced the 212A modem, similar in design, but using the lower frequency set for transmission. It was not compatible with the VA3400, but it would operate with 103A modem at 300 bit/s.
In 1977, Vadic responded with the VA3467 triple modem, an answer-only modem sold to computer center operators that supported Vadic's 1,200-bit/s mode, AT&T's 212A mode, and 103A operation.
1980s
A significant advance in modems was the
Hayes Smartmodem, introduced in 1981. The Smartmodem was an otherwise standard 103A 300 bit/s direct-connect modem, but it introduced a command language which allowed the computer to make control requests, such as commands to dial or answer calls, over the same RS-232 interface used for the data connection. The command set used by this device became a de facto standard, the
Hayes command set, which was integrated into devices from many other manufacturers.
Automatic dialing was not a new capability - it had been available via separate
Automatic Calling Units, and via modems using the
X.21 interface - but the Smartmodem made it available in a single device with the ubiquitous RS-232 interface, making this capability accessible from virtually any system or language.
The introduction of the Smartmodem made communications much simpler and more easily accessed. This provided a growing market for other vendors, who licensed the Hayes patents and competed on price or by adding features. This eventually led to legal action over use of the patented Hayes command language.
Dial modems generally remained at 300 and 1,200 bit/s (eventually becoming standards such as
V.21 and
V.22) into the mid-1980s.
In 1984,
V.22bis was created, a 2,400-bit/s system similar in concept to the 1,200-bit/s Bell 212. This bit rate increases was achieved by defining four or eight distinct symbols, which allowed the encoding of two or three bits per symbol instead of only one. By the late 1980s, many modems could support improved standards like this, and 2,400-bit/s operation was becoming common.
Increasing modem speed greatly improved the responsiveness of online systems and made
file transfer practical. This led to rapid growth of
online services with large file libraries, which in turn gave more reason to own a modem. The rapid update of modems led to a similar rapid increase in BBS use.
The introduction of
microcomputer systems with internal
expansion slots made small internal modems practical. This led to a series of popular modems for the
S-100 bus and
Apple II computers that could directly dial out, answer incoming calls, and hang up entirely from software, the basic requirements of a
bulletin board system (BBS). The seminal
CBBS for instance was created on an S-100 machine with a Hayes internal modem, and a number of similar systems followed.
Echo cancellation became a feature of modems in this period, which improved the bandwidth available to both modems by allowing them to ignore their own reflected signals.
Additional improvements were introduced by
quadrature amplitude modulation (QAM) encoding, which increased the number of bits per symbol to four through a combination of phase shift and amplitude.
Transmitting at 1,200 baud produced the 4,800 bit/s V.27ter standard, and at 2,400 baud the 9,600 bit/s V.32. The
carrier frequency was 1,650 Hz in both systems.
The introduction of these higher-speed systems also led to the development of the digital
fax machine during the 1980s. While early fax technology also used modulated signals on a phone line, digital fax used the now-standard digital encoding used by computer modems. This eventually allowed computers to send and receive fax images.
1990s
Sportster 14,400 Fax modem (1994)|alt=]]
In the early 90s, V.32 modems operating at 9600 bit/s were introduced, but were expensive and were only starting to enter the market when V.32bis was standardized as well, which operated at 14,400 bit/s.
Rockwell International|Rockwell International's chip division developed a new driver chip set incorporating the V.32bis standard and aggressively priced it.
Supra, Inc. arranged a short-term exclusivity arrangement with Rockwell, and developed the
SupraFAXModem 14400 based on it. Introduced in January 1992 at $399 (or less), it was half the price of the slower V.32 modems already on the market. This led to a price war, and by the end of the year V.32 was dead, never having been really established, and V.32bis modems were widely available for $250.
V.32bis was so successful that the older high-speed standards had little to recommend them. USRobotics (USR) fought back with a 16,800 bit/s version of HST, while AT&T introduced a one-off 19,200 bit/s method they referred to as V.32ter, but neither non-standard modem sold well.

Consumer interest in these proprietary improvements waned during the lengthy introduction of the 28,800 bit/s
V.34 standard. While waiting, several companies decided to release hardware and introduced modems they referred to as ''V.FAST''.
In order to guarantee compatibility with V.34 modems once the standard was ratified (1994), manufacturers used more flexible components, generally a
DSP and
microcontroller, as opposed to purpose-designed
ASIC modem chips. This would allow later firmware updates to conform with the standards once ratified.
The ITU standard V.34 represents the culmination of these joint efforts. It employs the most powerful coding techniques available at the time, including channel encoding and shape encoding. From the mere four bits per symbol (9.6 kbit/s), the new standards used the functional equivalent of 6 to 10 bits per symbol, plus increasing baud rates from 2,400 to 3,429, to create 14.4, 28.8, and 33.6 kbit/s modems. This rate is near the theoretical
Shannon limit of a phone line.
=56 kbit/s technologies
=
While 56,000 bit/s speeds had been available for leased-line modems for some time, they did not become available for dial up modems until the late 1990s.

In the late 1990s, technologies to achieve speeds above 33.6 kbit/s began to be introduced. Several approaches were used, but all of them began as solutions to a single fundamental problem with phone lines.
By the time technology companies began to investigate speeds above 33.6 kbit/s, telephone companies had switched almost entirely to all-digital networks. As soon as a phone line reached a local central office, a ''line card'' converted the analog signal from the subscriber to a digital one and conversely. While digitally encoded telephone lines notionally provide the same bandwidth as the analog systems they replaced, the digitization itself placed constraints on the ''types'' of waveforms that could be reliably encoded.
The first problem was that the process of analog-to-digital conversion is intrinsically lossy, but second, and more importantly, the digital signals used by the telcos were not "linear": they did not encode all frequencies the same way, instead utilizing a nonlinear encoding (
μ-law and
a-law) meant to favor the nonlinear response of the human ear to voice signals. This made it very difficult to find a 56 kbit/s encoding that could survive the digitizing process.
Modem manufacturers discovered that, while the analog to digital conversion could not preserve higher speeds, ''digital-to-analog'' conversions could. Because it was possible for an ISP to obtain a direct digital connection to a telco, a ''digital modem'' one that connects directly to a digital telephone network interface, such as T1 or PRI could send a signal that utilized every bit of bandwidth available in the system. While that signal still had to be converted back to analog at the subscriber end, that conversion would not distort the signal in the same way that the opposite direction did.
For this same reason, while 56k did permit 56 kbit/s ''downstream'' (from ISP to subscriber), the same speed was never achieved in the ''upstream'' (from the subscriber to the ISP) direction, because that required going through an analog-to-digital conversion. This problem was never overcome.
Early 56k dial-up products
The first 56k dial-up option was a proprietary design from
USRobotics, which they called "X2" because 56k was twice the speed (×2) of 28k modems.
At that time, USRobotics held a 40% share of the retail modem market, while Rockwell International held an 80% share of the modem
chipset market. Concerned with being shut out, Rockwell began work on a rival 56k technology. They joined with
Lucent and
Motorola to develop what they called "K56Flex" or just "Flex".
Both technologies reached the market around February 1997; although problems with K56Flex modems were noted in product reviews through July, within six months the two technologies worked equally well, with variations dependent largely on local connection characteristics.
The retail price of these early 56K modems was about US$200, compared to $100 for standard 33k modems. Compatible equipment was also required at the
Internet service providers (ISPs) end, with costs varying depending on whether their current equipment could be upgraded. About half of all ISPs offered 56k support by October 1997. Consumer sales were relatively low, which USRobotics and Rockwell attributed to conflicting standards.
Standardized 56k (V.90/V.92)
In February 1998, The
International Telecommunication Union (ITU) announced the draft of a new 56 kbit/s standard
V.90 with strong industry support. Incompatible with either existing standard, it was an amalgam of both, but was designed to allow both types of modem to by a firmware upgrade. The V.90 standard was approved in September 1998 and widely adopted by ISPs and consumers.
The
V.92 standard was approved by ITU in November 2000 and utilized digital
PCM technology to increase the upload speed to a maximum of 48 kbit/s.
The high upload speed was a tradeoff. 48 kbit/s upstream rate would reduce the downstream as low as 40 kbit/s due to echo effects on the line. To avoid this problem, V.92 modems offer the option to turn off the digital upstream and instead use a plain 33.6 kbit/s analog connection in order to maintain a high digital downstream of 50 kbit/s or higher.
V.92 also added two other features. The first is the ability for users who have call waiting to put their
dial-up Internet connection on hold for extended periods of time while they answer a call. The second feature is the ability to quickly connect to one's ISP, achieved by remembering the analog and digital characteristics of the telephone line and using this saved information when reconnecting.
Evolution of dial-up speeds
These values are maximum values, and actual values may be slower under certain conditions (for example, noisy phone lines). For a complete list see the companion article ''
list of device bandwidths''. A
baud is one symbol per second; each symbol may encode one or more data bits.
Compression
Many dial-up modems implement standards for
data compression to achieve higher effective throughput for the same bitrate.
V.44 is an example used in conjunction with
V.92 to achieve speeds greater than 56k over ordinary phone lines.
As telephone-based 56k modems began losing popularity, some Internet service providers such as Netzero/Juno, Netscape, and others started using pre-compression to increase apparent throughput. This server-side compression can operate much more efficiently than the on-the-fly compression performed within modems, because the compression techniques are content-specific (JPEG, text, EXE, etc.). Website text, images, and Flash media are typically compacted to approximately 4%, 12%, and 30%, respectively. The drawback is a loss in quality, as they use
lossy compression which causes images to become pixelated and smeared. ISPs employing this approach often advertise it as "accelerated dial-up".
These accelerated downloads are integrated into the
Opera and
Amazon Silk web browsers, using their own server-side text and image compression.
Methods of attachment
Dial-up modems can attach in two different ways: with an acoustic coupler, or with a direct electrical connection.
Directly connected modems
The ''Hush-a-Phone'' decision which legalized acoustic couplers applied only to mechanical connections to a telephone set, not electrical connections to the telephone line. The ''
Carterfone'' decision of 1968, however, permitted customers to attach devices directly to a telephone line as long as they followed stringent Bell-defined standards for non-interference with the phone network.
This opened the door to independent (non-AT&T) manufacture of direct-connect modems, that plugged directly into the phone line rather than via an acoustic coupler.
While ''Carterfone'' required AT&T to permit connection of devices, AT&T successfully argued that they should be allowed to require the use of a special device to protect their network, placed in between the third-party modem and the line, called a
Data Access Arrangement or DAA. The use of DAAs was mandatory from 1969 to 1975 when the new FCC Part 68 rules allowed the use of devices without a Bell-provided DAA, subject to equivalent circuitry being included in the third-party device.
Virtually all modems produced after the 80s are direct-connect.
Acoustic couplers
While Bell (AT&T) provided modems that attached via direct wire connection to the phone network as early as 1958, their regulations at that time did not permit the direct electrical connection of any non-Bell device to a telephone line. However, the
Hush-a-Phone ruling allowed customers to attach any device ''to a telephone set'' as long as it did not interfere with its functionality. This allowed third-party (non-Bell) manufacturers to sell modems utilizing an ''acoustic coupler''.
With an acoustic coupler, an ordinary telephone handset was placed in a cradle containing a speaker and microphone positioned to match up with those on the handset. The tones used by the modem were transmitted and received into the handset, which then relayed them to the phone line.
Because the modem was not electrically connected, it was incapable of picking up, hanging up or dialing, all of which required direct control of the line. Touch-tone dialing would have been possible, but touch-tone was not universally available at this time. Consequently, the dialing process was executed by the user lifting the handset, dialing, then placing the handset on the coupler. To accelerate this process, a user could purchase a ''dialer'' or ''Automatic Calling Unit''.
Automatic Calling Units / Dialers
Early modems - both acoustically coupled and directly connected - could not place or receive calls on their own, but required human intervention for these steps.
As early as 1964, Bell provided ''Automatic Calling Units'' that connected separately to a second serial port on a host machine and could be commanded to open the line, dial a number, and even ensure the far end had successfully connected before transferring control to the modem. Later on, third-party models would become available, sometimes known simply as ''dialers'', and features such as the ability to automatically sign in to time-sharing systems.
Eventually this capability would be built into modems and no longer require a separate device.
Controller-based modems vs. Softmodems/Winmodems
Prior to the 90s, modems contained all the electronics and intelligence to convert data from bytes to an analog signal and back again, and to handle the dialing process, as a mix of discrete logic and special-purpose chips. This type of modem is sometimes referred to as "Controller-based."
In 1993, Digicom introduced the ''Connection 96 Plus'', a modem which replaced the discrete and custom components with a general purpose digital signal processor, which could be reprogrammed to upgrade to newer standards.
Subsequently, USRobotics released the ''Sportster Winmodem'', a similarly upgradable DSP-based design.
As this design trend spread, both terms - ''Softmodem'' and ''Winmodem'' - obtained a negative connotation in non-Windows-based computing circles because the drivers were either unavailable for non-Windows platforms, or were only available as unmaintainable closed-source binaries, a particular problem for Linux users.
Later in the 90s, software-based modems became available. These are essentially sound cards, and in fact a common design uses the
AC'97 audio codec, which provides multichannel audio to a PC and includes three audio channels for modem signals.
The audio sent and received on the line by a modem of this type is generated and processed entirely in software, often in a device driver. There is little functional difference from the user's perspective, but this design reduces the cost of a modem by moving most of the processing power into inexpensive software instead of expensive hardware
DSPs or discrete components.
Softmodems of both types are either internal cards, or connect over external buses such as
USB, but never utilize RS-232 because they require a high bandwidth audio signal channel to the host computer.
Since the interface is not RS-232, there is no standard for communication with the device directly. Instead, softmodems come with drivers which create an emulated RS-232 port, which standard modem software (such as an operating system dialer application) can communicate with.
Voice/fax modems
"Voice" and "fax" are terms added to describe any dial modem that is capable of recording/playing audio or transmitting/receiving faxes. Some modems are capable of all three functions.
Voice modems are used for
computer telephony integration applications as simple as placing/receiving calls directly through a computer with a headset, and as complex as fully automated
robocalling systems.
Fax modems can be used for computer-based faxing, in which faxes are sent and received without inbound or outbound faxes ever needing to ever be printed on paper. This differs from
efax, in which faxing occurs over the internet, in some cases involving no phone lines whatsoever.
Popularity
A 1994
Software Publishers Association found that although 60% of computers in US households had a modem, only 7% of households went online.
A
CEA study in 2006 found that dial-up Internet access was declining in the U.S. In 2000, dial-up Internet connections accounted for 74% of all U.S. residential Internet connections. The United States demographic pattern for dial-up modem users per capita has been more or less mirrored in Canada and Australia for the past 20 years.
Dial-up modem use in the U.S. had dropped to 60% by 2003, and in 2006, stood at 36%. Voiceband modems were once the most popular means of
Internet access in the U.S., but with the advent of new ways of accessing the Internet, the traditional 56K modem was losing popularity. The dial-up modem is still widely used by customers in rural areas, where DSL, cable, satellite, or fiber optic service is not available, or they are unwilling to pay what these companies charge. In its 2012 annual report,
AOL showed it still collected around US$700 million in fees from dial-up users: about three million people.
TTY/TDD
TDD devices are a subset of the
teleprinter intended for use by the deaf or hard of hearing, essentially a small teletype with a built-in dial-up modem and acoustic coupler. The first models produced in 1964 utilized
FSK modulation much like early computer modems.
Leased-line modems
A
leased line modem also uses ordinary phone wiring, like dial-up and DSL, but does not use the same network topology. While dial-up uses a normal phone line and connects through the telephone switching system, and DSL uses a normal phone line but connects to equipment at the telco central office, leased lines do not terminate at the telco.
Leased lines are pairs of telephone wire that have been connected together at one or more telco central offices so that they form a continuous circuit between two subscriber locations, such as a business' headquarters and a satellite office. They provide no power or dialtone - they are simply a pair of wires connected at two distant locations.
A dialup modem will not function across this type of line, because it does not provide the power, dialtone and switching that those modems require. However, a modem with leased-line capability can operate over such a line, and in fact can have greater performance because the line is not passing through the telco switching equipment, the signal is not filtered, and therefore higher analog bandwidth is available.
Leased-line modems can operate in 2-wire or 4-wire mode. The former uses a single pair of wires and can only transmit in one direction at a time, while the latter uses two pairs of wires and can transmit in both directions simultaneously. When two pairs are available, bandwidth can be as high as 1.5mbps, a full data
T1 circuit.
Broadband
thumb|left|DSL modem

The term ''
broadband'' gained widespread adoption in the late 90s to describe internet access technology exceeding the 56 kilobit/s maximum of dialup. There are many broadband technologies, such as various DSL (Digital Subscriber Line) technologies and cable broadband.
DSL technologies such as
ADSL,
HDSL and
VDSL use telephone lines (wires that were installed by a telephone company and originally intended for use by a telephone subscriber) but do not utilize most of the rest of the telephone system. Their signals are not sent through ordinary phone exchanges, but are instead received by special equipment (a
DSLAM) at the telephone company central office.
Because the signal does not pass through the telephone exchange, no "dialing" is required, and the bandwidth constraints of an ordinary voice call are not imposed. This allows much higher frequencies, and therefore much faster speeds. ADSL in particular is designed to permit voice calls and data usage over the same line simultaneously.
Similarly,
cable modems use infrastructure originally intended to carry television signals, and like DSL, typically permit receiving television signals at the same time as broadband internet service.
Other broadband modems include
FTTx modems,
satellite modems, and
power line modems.
Terminology
Different terms are used for broadband modems, because they are frequently contain more than just a modulation/demodulation component.
Because high speed connections are frequently used by multiple computers at once, many broadband modems do not have direct (e.g. USB) PC connections, but connect over a network such as Ethernet or Wi-Fi. Early broadband modems offered
Ethernet handoff allowing the use of one or more public IP addresses, but no other services such as NAT and DHCP that would allow multiple computers to share one connection. This led to many consumers purchasing separate "broadband routers," placed between the modem and their network, to perform these functions.
Eventually, ISPs began providing
residential gateways which combined the modem and broadband router into a single package that provided routing,
NAT, security features, and even
Wi-Fi access in addition to modem functionality, so that subscribers could connect their entire household without purchasing any extra equipment. Even later, these devices were extended to provide "
triple play" features such as telephony and television service. Nonetheless, these devices are still often referred to simply as "modems" by service providers and manufacturers.
Consequently the terms "modem," "router" and "gateway" are now used interchangeably in casual speech, but in a technical context "modem" may carry a specific connotation of basic functionality with no routing or other features, while the other terms describe a device with features such as NAT.
Broadband modems may also handle authentication such as
PPPoE. While it is often possible to authenticate a broadband connection from a users PC, as was the case with dial-up internet service, moving this task to the broadband modem allows it to establish and maintain the connection itself, which makes sharing access between PCs easier since each one does not have to authenticate separately. Broadband modems typically remain authenticated to the ISP as long as they are powered on.
Radio
Any communication technology sending digital data wirelessly involves a modem. This includes
direct broadcast satellite,
WiFi,
WiMax,
mobile phones,
GPS,
Bluetooth and
NFC.
Modern telecommunications and data networks also make extensive use of
radio modems where long distance data links are required. Such systems are an important part of the
PSTN, and are also in common use for high-speed
computer network links to outlying areas where
fiber optic is not economical.
Wireless modems come in a variety of types, bandwidths, and speeds. Wireless modems are often referred to as transparent or smart. They transmit information that is modulated onto a carrier frequency to allow many wireless communication links to work simultaneously on different frequencies.
Transparent modems operate in a manner similar to their phone line modem cousins. Typically, they were
half duplex, meaning that they could not send and receive data at the same time. Typically, transparent modems are polled in a round robin manner to collect small amounts of data from scattered locations that do not have easy access to wired infrastructure. Transparent modems are most commonly used by utility companies for data collection.
Smart modems come with media access controllers inside, which prevents random data from colliding and resends data that is not correctly received. Smart modems typically require more bandwidth than transparent modems, and typically achieve higher data rates. The IEEE
802.11 standard defines a short range modulation scheme that is used on a large scale throughout the world.
Mobile broadband
thumb|Huawei 4G+ Dual Band Modem|alt=|left|127x127px
Modems which use a mobile telephone system (
GPRS,
UMTS,
HSPA,
EVDO,
WiMax, etc.), are known as mobile broadband modems (sometimes also called wireless modems). Wireless modems can be embedded inside a
laptop, mobile phone or other device, or be connected externally. External wireless modems include
connect cards, USB modems, and
cellular routers.
Most
GSM wireless modems come with an integrated
SIM cardholder (i.e.
Huawei E220, Sierra 881.) Some models are also provided with a microSD memory slot and/or jack for additional external antenna, (Huawei E1762, Sierra Compass 885.)
The CDMA (EVDO) versions do not typically use
R-UIM cards, but use
Electronic Serial Number (ESN) instead.
Until the end of April 2011, worldwide shipments of USB modems surpassed embedded 3G and 4G modules by 3:1 because USB modems can be easily discarded. Embedded modems may overtake separate modems as tablet sales grow and the incremental cost of the modems shrinks, so by 2016, the ratio may change to 1:1.
Like mobile phones, mobile broadband modems can be SIM locked to a particular network provider. Unlocking a modem is achieved the same way as unlocking a phone, by using an
'unlock code'.
Optical modem

A modem that connects to a fiber optic network is known as an
optical network terminal (ONT) or optical network unit (ONU). These are commonly used in
fiber to the home installations, installed inside or outside a house to convert the optical medium to a copper Ethernet interface, after which a router or gateway is often installed to perform authentication, routing, NAT, and other typical consumer internet functions, in addition to "
triple play" features such as telephony and television service.
Fiber optic systems can use quadrature amplitude modulation to maximize throughput. 16QAM uses a 16-point constellation to send four bits per symbol, with speeds on the order of 200 or 400 gigabits per second. 64QAM uses a 64-point constellation to send six bits per symbol, with speeds up to 65 terabits per second. Although this technology has been announced, it may not yet be commonly used.
Home networking
Although the name ''modem'' is seldom used, some high-speed home networking applications do use modems, such as
powerline ethernet. The
G.hn standard for instance, developed by
ITU-T, provides a high-speed (up to 1 Gbit/s)
local area network using existing home wiring (power lines, phone lines and
coaxial cables). G.hn devices use
orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing (OFDM) to modulate a digital signal for transmission over the wire.
As described above, technologies like Wi-Fi and Bluetooth also use modems to communicate over radio at short distances.
Null modem

A
null modem cable is a specially wired cable connected between the
serial ports of two devices, with the transmit and receive lines reversed. It is used to connect two devices directly without a modem. The same software or hardware typically used with modems (such as Procomm or Minicom) could be used with this type of connection.
A null modem adapter is a small device with plugs on both end which is placed on the end of a normal "straight-through" serial cable to convert it into a null-modem cable.
Short-haul modem
A "short haul modem" is a device that bridges the gap between leased-line and dial-up modems. Like a leased-line modem, they transmit over "bare" lines with no power or telco switching equipment, but are not intended for the same distances that leased lines can achieve. Ranges up to several miles are possible, but significantly, short-haul modems can be used for ''medium'' distances, greater than the maximum length of a basic serial cable but still relatively short, such as within a single building or campus. This allows a serial connection to be extended for perhaps only several hundred to several thousand feet, a case where obtaining an entire telephone or leased line would be overkill.
While some short-haul modems do in fact use modulation, low-end devices (for reasons of cost or power consumption) are simple "line drivers" that increase the level of the digital signal but do not modulate it. These are not technically modems, but the same terminology is used for them.
See also
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56 kbit/s line
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Automatic negotiation
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BBN Technologies
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Command and Data modes (modem)
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Fax demodulator
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List of device bit rates
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List of ITU-T V-series recommendations
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Modulation
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RJ-11
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Wake-on-ring
References
External links
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Hayes-compatible Modems and AT Commands from the
Serial Data Communications Programming ''
Wikibook''
International Telecommunications Union ITU Data communication over the telephone network
– V.22, V.22bis, V.32 and V.34 handshakes
Getting connected: a history of modems– techradar
{{Telecommunications
Category:American inventions
Category:Bulletin board systems
Category:Computer-related introductions in 1958
Category:Logical link control
Category:Physical layer protocols