Earthlink Invests In Broadband Over Power Lines 308
prostoalex writes "Earthlink dedicated $500,000 to delivering broadband connections over power lines by launching a test drive of the technology with Progress Energy in North Carolina. 500 homes involved in the projects can sign up for promotional pricing of $20/month, which after 3 months will be changed to $50/month. No word on bandwidth provided, but Ambient Corp., which provides technology for the project and accpeted EarthLink investment, claims data rates exceeding 10 Mpbs."
Interference problems... (Score:5, Informative)
Several Amateur Radio bands (1.8, 3.5, 7.0, 10.0, 14.0, 18.068, 21.0, 24.9, 28.0, 50.0 Mhz)
shortwave radio (7-14 Mhz)
older cordless devices, such as phones (49 Mhz)
CB Radio (29Mhz)
Military communications (several)
And there's probably more, but i'm too lazy to dig them up...
Re:Interference problems... (Score:3, Informative)
Small correction: CB Radio is on 27Mhz (11m)
Re:Interference problems... (Score:4, Insightful)
by the time this gets to most people, it will cost 70 bucks a month I bet.
Re:Interference problems... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Interference problems... (Score:5, Informative)
-- w1rww
Re:Interference problems... (Score:3, Insightful)
Very businesslike, this is a way to look at that:
Basically, the interference should not be so high that a lot of Hams quit. It doesn't really matter how much interference there is, as long as the Hams still actively pursue their hobby, because when there is a need for those emergency services, the power lines and their interference will likely be down. Otherwise, the internet-over-power would still be working....
So, for example, if the interfer
Re:Interference problems... (Score:5, Interesting)
If this gets to the point that it's deployed in my area, I plan to become *extremely* active on the HF Amateur Radio bands with *full* legal power. If it means fighting fire with fire, then by all means I'm prepared. They operate under the part 15 "non interference" rules. I operate under full FCC license to transmit. IOTW, I win. Hmm... when is the next DX contest???
To quote Part 15: "must not interfere" means that they legally cannot interfere with my operation, and "must accept any interference" means that if I kill an entire neighborhood's internet feed, that's just the breaks. They cant stop my transmissions as long as I am complying with the rules and regs.
But, being a realist, I suppose that once "big business" gets involved, then all they have to do is throw money, and they have plenty, at lobbyists and get congress to pressure the FCC to toss us hams off the air. Sadly, amateur radio does not have the status it once had.
Comments?
de N5DH
Re:Interference problems... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Interference problems... (Score:2)
If jetblue can get incoming satellite TV to every coach chair, then why shouldn't bidirectional voice be possible from the cockpit? Shouldn't it be possible to make a satellite communications system that is at least as reliable as VHF?
Re:Interference problems... (Score:3, Funny)
-- de N1ZPP
Re:Interference problems... (Score:2)
eheheheheheh
Re:Interference problems... (Score:5, Informative)
For those who think HAM operators have no foundation behind their objections to BPL please visit this site [arrl.org] and see results of actual studies on interference.
There is a lot of additional issues surrounding BPL. Such as the fact that power market is regulated and comunications market is not. Utility companies are going to finance their excursion into broadband internet access out of your pocket even if you are not going to use it.
Re:Interference problems... (Score:3, Insightful)
Whaddyamean, the communications market is not regulated? What does the FCC do then? And what are those taxes on my phone bills for?
Re:Interference problems... (Score:5, Insightful)
- Hams are useful to the community : they do aviation security radio watches, can relay messages from people at sea, and are often the last communication medium when all else fail. You don't believe me and that's normal, because it's never happened to you (or me, I'm too young). But I bet resistant fighters during WW2 really did appreciate, for example.
- There are a lot of great technical advances that were made by hams, playing and experimenting on their allocated bands. To deny them the bands just so you can d/l pr0n in the middle of Alabama means to deprive the entire scientific and technical community of these discoveries.
- Hams have been using their slices of the spectrum for decades, and had to work and pay for the privilege. In short, if nothing else, I'll say we were here first, and so we do have some rights in the matter.
There are many other reasons why ham bands should be left alone, but this is
73 de F8EJF
Re:Interference problems... (Score:2, Troll)
yeah, that was then. This is now.
There are a lot of great technical advances that were made by hams, playing and experimenting on their allocated bands.
There were alot of scientific discoveries using lots of things. But How many of these ham discoveries were in the past 10 years? Not to say that their couldnt be some new discovery, but this is just selfish coveting, not scientific necessity.
Hams have been using their sli
Re:Interference problems... (Score:2)
You're making the mistake of assuming that your modern day conveniences will work when the power is gone. It won't. This was shown in that massive Blackout that affected the Northeast of the US a year or so ago, remember that?
Well people who had that archaic hobby
Re:Interference problems... (Score:2)
The communication isn't usually between private citizens and emergency workers but between emergency workers and other emergency workers and emergency workers and outside agencies.
You've obviously got no clue what you're
Re:Interference problems... (Score:4, Insightful)
-There are lots of great technical advances made by internet users. To deprive people the bands so a tiny minority can putz around on it deprives the entire scientific and technical community of these discoveries.
-We, the people, own the spectrum, and let you use it. Your rights in the matter end at your right to vote.
There are many other reasons why ham bands should be given to more useful purposes.
Re:Interference problems... (Score:2)
Re:Interference problems... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Interference problems... (Score:2)
Network connectivity can be delivered over any number of mediums (satellite, fiber, cable, etc) whereas ham radio is limited to RADIO. Your argument is stupid.
We, the people, own the spectrum, and let you use it. Your rights in the matter end at your right to vote.
hams are part of "we, the people" as well, jackass. "Voting" isn't how rights work. Your right to trample the RF spectrum to the detriment of ot
Re:Interference problems... (Score:3, Insightful)
However, in the case of hurricanes, earthquakes, etc a major form of communication is amateur radio. If those airwaves are messed up by interference, we lose that blessing.
I'd say the responsibility belongs with those bringing about Internet over powerlines to come up with a solution to stepping on so many frequencies.
A solution may not be chea
Re:Interference problems... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Interference problems... (Score:2)
If the "hobby" was there before you, you bet!
i say majority rules. do a vote on it in nc, i am pretty sure that people would pick broadband internet over ham radio.
The majority of people would like to not pay taxes, drive Ferraris for the price of a Yugo, or rape women legally. It doesn't mean because they want it, they should get it.
Re:Interference problems... (Score:2)
Re:Interference problems... (Score:2)
Good riddance.
10-4 good buddy...
Re:Interference problems... (Score:2, Interesting)
This is somewhat sad that you'd be willing to throw away a natural irreplacable treasure to the bane of corperate profits.
Re:Interference problems... (Score:2)
Re:Interference problems... (Score:2)
Re:Interference problems... (Score:3, Insightful)
They're not using the spectrum, they're trampling it. Those frequencies they're blasting are still officially designated for other uses. Look at it this way: What if the water company came up with a way to transmit data using pressure waves in the water mains, but the side effect was that water would leak out of the joints in the mains under the street and create hundreds of sinkholes in the road, rendering the road useless. Is their right to deli
Re:Interference problems... (Score:4, Interesting)
the portion of the electro magnetic spectrum bpl wants to destroy is also very important because its the only section of the spectrum that bounces off the inosphere (allowing for long distance communications) and its also the part of the spectrum with the least amount of bandwidth.
Re:Interference problems... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Interference problems... (Score:2)
BPL wipes out all of HF, and a little bit of the bottom of VHF. These frequencies have unique propagation characteristics that are not present on any other bands. (The ability to talk half-way around the world, for starters)
So, if you're willing to kiss-off an entire class of communications in the name of your broadband (which either telco or cable could provide better under the same conditions), there's a whole bunch of us who a
ouch (Score:3, Funny)
Error in summary (Score:5, Informative)
In the projects? (Score:4, Funny)
Yo man, here in the projects we can't even afford $10 for groceries, and yo want us to shell out $50 a month on broadband? I don think this is gunna fly, man!
Didn't we just hear about how dangerous this is? (Score:5, Funny)
Bandwidth Capping (Score:5, Interesting)
You know that you won't actually get 10Mbps for this, because the ISP's end bill and equipment needs would be to much. That's why all of the DSL/Cable companies have started sending acceptable usage warnings to their customers because they used up all of their unlimited bandwidth (God I love irony) (God I love being an agnostic who says God alot). Any who, as far as I know, this tech was meant more for giving broadband to them crazy country foke who ain't got them thar new digitized lines.... Right? Anyway, what is the range of these lines? How far away can you live from a "hub" or how exactly does that work....
Re:Bandwidth Capping (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Bandwidth Capping (Score:2, Insightful)
Bandwidth is the greatest overpriced product besides soda pop and breakfast cereal.
BTW, I won't use a cable modem for an un-aceptable usage policy. Don't see why people would save 5 bux for a high ping, limited service
Re:Bandwidth Capping (Score:2)
Mpbs? (Score:5, Funny)
Won't the internet just go *down* more? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Won't the internet just go *down* more? (Score:2)
Re:Won't the internet just go *down* more? (Score:5, Funny)
Keanu is that you?
Re:Won't the internet just go *down* more? (Score:2, Insightful)
I'll be busy looting while the geeks sit in their basements waiting for the internet to come on.
Re:Won't the internet just go *down* more? (Score:2)
Re:Won't the internet just go *down* more? (Score:2)
Not to worry... (Score:3, Funny)
Tinfoil Hat^WSteel Helmet Time (Score:5, Funny)
Not as cool as AOL (Score:5, Funny)
How long will it last? (Score:3, Interesting)
Jamming-proof (Score:2)
But civilian service class radios, like the police, emergency rescue etc all are vulnerable...
Re:Jamming-proof (Score:2)
Re:How long will it last? (Score:2)
Write your congressman/woman: (Score:2)
Re:How long will it last? (Score:2, Interesting)
Neither the FCC nor the Armed Forces make telecommunications policy in the way you infer. Both get their marching orders (pun intended) from Washington, and BPL has a lot of lobbying behind it.
Please don't assume that the military will be able (or even inclined) to shout "Halt!" before the BPL onslaught: if they have to buy brand new radios to replace the single-channel paradigm they've been using for most non-critical traffic, then that's just another line item in a multi-billion dollar budget. That's wh
Completely naive question... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Completely naive question... (Score:3, Informative)
Whenever I read 10 mbps (Score:5, Insightful)
In my town great most providers advertise like this. They just install ethernet lines between people's houses. And then say, 500 customers, each on 10 mbit line are all plugged into one 1mbit line connecting with the rest of the world.
Yeah, transfers like 1KB/s are quite common.
And of course.... (Score:2, Insightful)
Power Supply NIC (Score:2, Funny)
Audiophile rant (Score:3, Interesting)
I am a sound freak. I replace components in store-bought devices, I spend hours adjusting proper placement of speakers and matching cable lengths to millimeter precision. Now if some big ignorant comms corporation starts pumping multi-mhz modulation on my power lines, that will most likely affect my hi-fi components due to high frequency aliasing componded by cheap cabling and long distances. Wouldn't that be VERY BAD for these multi-thousand-dollar amplifiers that rely on crystal-clean power to do their thing ? Conventional power conditioners are designed for filtering minor surges and dips in power, as well as light induced noise (interference). Now if the company injects 'noise' on purpose, with higher amplitude and reflections accumulated over hundreds of miles.. methinks it will seriously hinder the transient performance of my gear and that of many other, more wealthy and lawsuit-happy people.
Re:Audiophile rant (Score:3)
Re:Audiophile rant (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Audiophile rant (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Audiophile rant (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Audiophile rant (Score:2)
As though the power is "crystal-clean" to begin with. Most power coming across the lines is very poor. If you're that obsessed with good power, shouldnt you have a fantastic line conditioner anyway?
Re:Audiophile rant (Score:2)
These would be far more audible than the MHz-scale interference, although they only happen briefly.
Where is the Advanced Technology? (Score:2, Funny)
I'm tired of people competing for frequency bands. Where are all the super-antennae that allow you to focus in a signal that's only 0.00001 Hz different than another, different signal next to it?
Come on, technology! Figure it out! It's the 20-somethingth century for crying out loud. We should be able to have high-speed Internet connections and Morse code wonks. Why do we have to choose?
sev
I don't buy this article at all. (Score:5, Informative)
Also they fail to mention... (Score:3, Insightful)
Replacement list:
1. Wooden desk (burned)
2. Computer/Monitor (charred)
3. Everything that was in their office. (toasted)
The project will be beta for a long time. They just did all this because they wanted to get people talking and maybe buying stocks (which I have too much of). Why am I posting this...because when people from india show up around my cube all of a sudden, I know I am on the endangered outsource to do list.
Mpbs? (Score:5, Funny)
For when you need 10 Million PBS stations.
All things considered. (Score:2)
Re:All things considered. (Score:2)
10 million NPR stations, sure (especially with the $200 M donation from Judy Kroc, McDonald's heiress). 10 million Oscars the Grouch I think we might not need.
Re:All things considered. (Score:2)
Either way, National Public Radio now is involved in the obesity industry.
Oh, now you're just confusing PBS and NPR on purpose to bug me, aren't you?
Besides which, NPR isn't entangled in McDonald's business at all. If Judy Kroc had to pay out a huge bunch of money, the money she already g
unfortunately Earthlink (Score:4, Insightful)
Will 220 give me 20Mbps? (Score:4, Interesting)
My power company only delivers 3 things: high bills (like I will want to give them extra money), power and, my favorite, power spikes (I've gone through two coffee pots, 3 baby monitors and a dozen AC adapters for various things). Yes, the equipment is built by someone else but it will be installed and managed by people that are delivering the first and third things above. This does not have warm and fuzzy written all over it.
We'll for some, a 3rd choice will be welcomed to drive rates down. For other's at least a single choice will be welcomed. More power to them.
interference both ways (Score:2, Funny)
Security (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Security (Score:2)
If you think that this power-line delivered data communications is unsafe, then you must also think that all wireless and cablemodem communications is unsafe as well..
Don't blame the transport layer for your "plain text" and "non-ssl e-mail" concerns.
Hey! (Score:4, Funny)
-psy
And another problem. (Score:2, Funny)
Screw the traffic LED on the router, my lamps-a-blink'n.
Re:And another problem. (Score:2)
What they're not telling about BPL (Score:3, Insightful)
- Even low-power, in-band transmissions can completely shut down BPL for a mile radius or more. Wonder what happens when I fire up my (FCC licensed) KW on 20 meters for a weekend-long contest?
- BPL is for overhead transmission lines. Burried lines don't have near the capacity but ARE better on interference.
- The bandwidth mentioned for BPL is STDM shared in the same way as cable modem service. YMWV
- Last, BPL operates as an unlicensed part 15 service. All part 15 users are liable to accept ANY and ALL interference from licensed services and must cease use of a part 15 device that causes interference to a licensed service. This passes ALL interference problems off to the end-user.
Turn it off NOW or go to jail...
WB1GOT
Gratuitous Technical Link (Score:2, Interesting)
This is a Bad Thing (tm) (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:This is a Bad Thing (tm) (Score:2, Interesting)
Amperion not Ambient (Score:2, Insightful)
http://www.progress-energy.com/aboutus/
Lamp-posts as antennae... (Score:3, Interesting)
Matt...
Re: (Score:2)
Hmmmm (Score:2)
Introduced in Germany in 2001. Dead by now. (Score:2, Interesting)
From the article:
"RWE hopes to have 20,000 subscribers by July and grow that to 100,000 by the end of 2002. Beyond that, the growth potential is enormous."
Right. The last numbers were 15,000 subscribers early 2004 (compared to more than 2 million people using DSL, which by now is offered with 3Mbps).
Powerline internet had technical problems from the start on and came too late.
BPL too easy to sniff and DoS (Score:4, Informative)
But instead of accepting the facts, the power company is going to try it anyway because the people in charge are even more clueless than the most brain dead computer user. How long do you think the power company is going to put up with "My Internet service keeps going away!" complaints from their user base before they do the right thing and run fiber to the households.
Sure it may be fast and cheap, but it's suseptable to nearby radio transmitters and will be the most unreliable Internet connection out there. With the right radio equipment, packets could be sniffed, you could DoS the entire neighborhood with a CB radio or other low band or amateur HF transceiver. Not to mention all the RF hash that will be delivered to your house on a otherwise clean power line.
Hams: vote with your feet (Score:2)
Support L Ron Hubbard! (Score:2)
This may not be for real (Score:3, Interesting)
Their new ideas revolve around ways to transmit data through underground power cables with multiple neutral wires. Big underground power cables are surrounded by multiple neutral wires, which has some shielding effect. The idea is to differentially drive those multiple neutral wires with RF. This is claimed to emit less external RF than driving the high voltage side of the line.
In cities with underground cable vaults, it's easier to wire fibre or coax. Either provides more bandwidth. Ambient only claims 10Mb/s, and that's per cable segment, not per end user.
This looks more like a specialized technology being overhyped than a major breakthrough.
Re:If there is one thing worse than Gates... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:If there is one thing worse than Gates... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:just one pipe (Score:5, Funny)