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
Apr 15 INSG Inseego Corp. to Report First Quarter 2024 Financial Results on May 9, 2024
Apr 15 AVGO Broadcom questioned by EU regulators over VMware licensing: report
Apr 15 ERIC Ericsson (ERIC) Solution to Upgrade Swisscom's Mobile Network
Apr 15 CSCO Cisco Wins Upgrade To Buy On These Three Growth Catalysts
Apr 15 CSCO Cisco's (CSCO) Isovalent Buyout Expands Security Offering
Apr 15 CSCO Cisco Stock Gets Upgraded to Buy. Why Wall Street Is Abuzz.
Apr 15 AVGO Broadcom questioned by EU over VMware licensing changes
Apr 15 CSCO Cisco rises after BofA upgrades to Buy on 3 drivers of growth
Apr 15 AVGO Is It Worth Investing in Broadcom Inc. (AVGO) Based on Wall Street's Bullish Views?
Apr 15 IRDM Seeking Clues to Iridium (IRDM) Q1 Earnings? A Peek Into Wall Street Projections for Key Metrics
Apr 15 AVGO Broadcom Inc. (AVGO) is Attracting Investor Attention: Here is What You Should Know
Apr 15 AVGO 10 Best Low Volatility ETFs To Buy
Apr 15 IRDM Factors to Note Ahead of Iridium's (IRDM) Q1 Earnings Release
Apr 15 AVGO 3 Top Artificial Intelligence (AI) ETFs That Are Hiding in Plain Sight
Apr 15 ERIC LVMH, L’Oreal Face China Pain: EMEA Earnings Week Ahead
Apr 14 ERIC Research: More than Half of Singapore’s Organisations Experienced 1-2 hours of Weekly Downtime Due to Fixed Line/ Fibre Network Failure Over the Last 12 months
Apr 14 AVGO 2 Growth Stocks to Buy Like There's No Tomorrow
Apr 14 AVGO 3 Top Semiconductor Stocks to Watch in This Stage of the AI Revolution
Apr 14 AVGO 10 Unstoppable Stocks That Will Make You Richer
Apr 13 AVGO 3 Dividend-Paying Tech Stocks to Buy in April
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