Computer Science, asked by biradarp924, 8 months ago

The maximum data rate at which information travel
from transmitter to receiver is called​

Answers

Answered by dtvbyt36
0

Explanation:

By today's standards, the IEEE 488 maximum data rate of 1 Mbyte/sec is not very fast. One approach to improving this, developed by National Instruments, is HS 488, a high-speed GPIB handshake protocol that uses the same three control lines as IEEE 488 (DAV, NRFD, and NDAC).

HS 488 is backward compatible with standard GPIB instruments. However, if all devices on a bus support HS 488, the high-speed handshake is used and overall data rates can run as high as 8 Mbytes/sec (for two devices connected by

Answered by mindfulmaisel
2

Bandwidth is the correct answer

Explanation:

  • The maximum data rate at which information is transferred from the transmitter to the receiver is called bandwidth
  • A channel's bandwidth is the maximum frequency range available for data transmission on that channel.
  • We can compare both channels on the basis of bandwidth.  
  • this higher bandwidth channel has a higher data rate compared to the other channel.
  • Typically, the bandwidth is the difference between the maximum and minimum frequencies contained in complex signals.

Bandwidth is measured in Hertz (Hz).

1 KHz =1000 Hz

1 MHz =1000 KHz = 1000000 Hz

hence, Bandwidth is the correct answer

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