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Talk:Comparison of synchronous and asynchronous signalling

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The description of "synchronous transmission" provided in the article is inconsistent with various physical synchronous interfaces, e.g., SMPTE-310M. While a synchronizing signal is required (and provided) to receive the transmission, it need not travel "on another wire" -- the actual synchronizing signal can be embedded within the synchronous signal.

From SMPTE/EBU Task Force for Harmonized Standards for the Exchange of Program Material as Bitstreams:

"Synchronous transmission" describes a transmission technique that requires a common clock signal (or timing reference) between two communicating devices to coordinate their transmissions. This common reference can be embedded within the signal, or can physical travel along with signal on a similar or different medium.

"Asynchronous transmission" describes any transmission technique that does not require a common clock between the two communicating devices, but instead derives timing signals from special bits or characters (e.g. start/stop bits, flag characters) in the data stream itself. The essential characteristic of time-scales or signals such that their corresponding significant instants do not necessarily occur at the same average rate.