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Thursday, November 01, 2007

Broadband + New Algorithm = Broadband x 200

Broadband users who are fed up with the slow velocities from their supplier but have got got been told their existent Cu telephone set set line can't present a faster service may be in for a pleasant surprise, thanks to a radical new mathematical formula.

Australian PhD alumnus Toilet Papandriopoulos claims to have have invented a manner to turbo-charge current ADSL broadband speeds, enabling velocities of up to 200 modern times faster.

The system utilizes new algorithmic rules cut down the consequence that cross yak have on cyberspace watercourses that share the same physical Cu telephone line.

According to Dr Papandriopoulos, his new algorithmic rule could offer broadband velocities of up to an impressive 250Mbps on existing telecoms infrastructure. This would be ideal, given the UK's current state of broadband. The bulk of broadband users have less than one-half the broadband velocity advertised as "up to 8Mbps".

Using these algorithmic rules dramatically increased download speeds, allowing broadband users the ability to download information at a charge per unit of roughly 30Mbps. A practical illustration of this new velocity is that you using it would let a full-length DVD film to be downloaded in less than three minutes.

Dr Papandriopoulos is currently applying for patents of invention in both the United States and his native Commonwealth Of Australia to implement the new algorithmic rules into worldwide broadband cyberspace servers. If all travels well, his innovation may well go one of the hottest places amongst broadband service providers.

Not only would this better broadband at a human race scale of measurement but would also salvage billions. BT are currently in developments of BT21CN (BT 21st Century Networks) which would dwell of installing fiber optics to better broadband velocities to up to 24Mbps at a cost of £10bn.

If this algorithmic rule was to be implemented into the current web then BT would not necessitate upgrading just yet as in theory the velocities would accomplish significantly higher velocities without the demand for fiber optics.

Britain is in much demand of broadband improvement and Dr Toilet Papandriopoulos may just have got our answer.

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