Ah yes Ryder, but from the Wikipedia link you posted: "The skin effect is the tendency of an alternating electric current (AC) to distribute itself within a conductor so that the current density near the surface of the conductor is greater than that at its core."
Even this notes that the skin effect is specific to AC current.
Transmission of digital data, as I quoted from the electronics text, is DC.
Put these two facts together and "skin effect" is not relevant to digital data transmission, and so cables for such DC digital data do not need to take it into account.
QED.
Even this notes that the skin effect is specific to AC current.
Transmission of digital data, as I quoted from the electronics text, is DC.
Put these two facts together and "skin effect" is not relevant to digital data transmission, and so cables for such DC digital data do not need to take it into account.
QED.