Understanding Transceiver Chips
Optical transceivers are integrated circuit chips that route and receive data. These optical transceivers use fiber circuits to transmit and receive data rather than standard electrical wire. Transferring light waves of data through fiber and cable interfaces is known as fiber optic circuits. Central hubs are linked to end users at extremely fast speeds with these transceiver chips. To give an idea of how this works, these transceivers can get your home and office connected to the internet, telephone communication and digital television services in record times. The convenience of today's transceiver chip technology is the speed of information transfer rates.
There is more use to this new technology than simply linking to the internet. Home and offices will find it useful for local and wide range networking and quick download time for motion pictures.
These physical form factors are transceiver chips created with industry standards. Professional manufacturers are held to the same design rules by the Multi-Source Agreement.
These transceivers are grouped into support routing speeds. These speeds range from 1 Gbps to 10 Gbps, with each fiber designed to support specific speeds.
The ranges for this optic are rates that start at 100 Mbps and go up to 4 Gbps. Xenpak, XFP, and X2 are a list of other transceiver form factors. This optics supports a speed transmission of up to 10 Gbps.
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