Modem Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Modem stocks.

Modem Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
May 17 AVGO Dow Jones Closes Above 40,000 With Stock Market At Highs; All Eyes On Nvidia Earnings
May 17 AVGO Nvidia's long-term growth is uncertain: Analyst
May 17 AVGO Broadcom Announces Accelerate Program to Deliver Enhanced Customer Experience
May 16 DY Dycom Industries (DY) Declines More Than Market: Some Information for Investors
May 16 CSCO Cisco to Participate in J.P. Morgan Conference
May 16 DY Dycom (DY) Gears Up to Report Q1 Earnings: What to Expect
May 16 CSCO Cisco Systems Poised to Beat Market Expectations Amid Conservative Fiscal 2025 Targets, Morgan Stanley Says
May 16 CSCO How Cisco Systems Performed Ex-Splunk, 8 Analysts Weigh In On Q3 Earnings: Here's Where 'Upside Primarily Came From'
May 16 CSCO ETFs to Gain on Cisco's Q3 Earnings Strength
May 16 CSCO Cisco (CSCO) Q3 Earnings Top Estimates, Revenues Down Y/Y
May 16 AVGO Larry Robbins' Glenview Capital takes in Broadcom, exits Intel among Q1 moves
May 16 CSCO Cisco raises full-year guidance despite sales miss
May 16 CSCO Biggest stock movers today: WMT, MPW, CSCO, CB, and more
May 16 CSCO Cisco eases even as Wall Street sees signs of growth, inventory normalization
May 16 CSCO These Stocks Are Moving the Most Today: Walmart, Cisco, Dell, Chubb, Deere, GameStop, AST SpaceMobile, Canada Goose, and More
May 16 CSCO Cisco Stock Rises After Results Beat Expectations, Boosted by Splunk Deal
May 16 CSCO Stocks to Watch Thursday: Chubb, Deere, Baidu, Walmart, Under Armour
May 16 CSCO US STOCKS-Wall Street set for muted start after post-CPI rally
May 16 DY Dycom Industries (DY) is on the Move, Here's Why the Trend Could be Sustainable
May 16 CSCO Cisco: Bullish Breakout Building (Technical Analysis)
Modem

A modem (portmanteau of modulator-demodulator) is a hardware device that converts data between transmission media so that it can be transmitted from computer to computer (historically over telephone wires). The goal is to produce a signal that can be transmitted easily and decoded to reproduce the original digital data. Modems can be used with 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 modulated electrical signal for transmission over telephone lines and demodulated by another modem at the receiver side to recover the digital data.
Modems are generally 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 bytes per second (symbol B(s)). Modems can also be 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.

Browse All Tags