Hi
I don't think that's true. There's capacitance in the line regardless.
For low frequency it looks capacitive.
But at the signal frequency of interest (signal frequency) it should be close to resistive.
--> A 110 Ohms signal pair ... looks like a 110 Ohms resistive load to the driver. (thus the name)
Differential signaling is faster because, generally, the voltage levels are lower,
to add some details:
* the signal speed on the line does not depend on signal level.
* but the rise time may be smaller. Resulting in getting more "information per time" on the line.
(With identical rise rate a 0 to 400mV step would be 5 times faster than a 0 to 2000mV step.)
***
Differential pair in best case cause no GND currents, thus no GND bounce and thus less channel crosstalk and better noise margin.
***
It depends on the application. Do we talk about on board signaling, short distance wires, long distance?
Single channel or multiple channels?
What data rate?
What type of cable? coax for single endend signals?
Also to consider: EMI / EMC, signal loss, distortion, cable production tolerances, cable cost, cable stiffness (size, diameter...)
Klaus