Talk:Symmetric high-speed digital subscriber line

Symmetric Digital Subscriber Line says:
 * This ETSI variant is compatible with the ITU-T G.SHDSL standardized regional variant for Europe.

but G. Symmetric High-speed Digital Subscriber Line says:
 * This ETSI variant is not compatible with the ITU-T G.shdsl standardized regional variant for Europe

(emphasis mine). Which is correct?

Title
G. Symmetric High-speed Digital Subscriber Line is a weird title for this article: The current title appears to be the result of a blind substitute of the SHDSL acronym. I propose a move to Symmetric High-speed Digital Subscriber Line. BertK 19:24, 10 October 2006 (UTC)
 * Symmetric High-speed Digital Subscriber Line is the technology, abbreviated to SHDSL,
 * G.991.2 is the ITU-T recommendation standardizing it, the draft was called G.shdsl before the ITU-T assigned a recommendation number,
 * G.SHDSL can be found in marketing material, apparently meaning the SHDSL implementation is or was compliant to the G.shdsl draft.

SHDSL reach is greater than 3000m?
I don't know if 3000m is quoted in the standard, but I know that SHDSL can achieve much greater distances than that. I have a pair of modems that are currently running at max speed (2304kbps) over 3000m, and they are able to do 6000m at speeds of 784kbps or less. I have also seen figures up to 10km quoted, but that may be dependent on wire gauge. I propose changing "may be up to 3,000 meters" to "may be up to 6,000 meters or more".

Opep 11:04, 25 July 2007 (UTC)