12Mbps Powerline Broadband Trial Unveiled 316
An anonymous reader writes "The tiny state of Tasmania in Australia has kicked off the country's first commercial powerline broadband trial. The service is capable of providing Internet connectivity of up to 12Mbps but during trials, it will be limited to 4Mbps. Costs will range from $12 (A$15) to $67 (A$80) per month for speeds between 256Kbps and 4Mbps. Powerline broadband has received wide support from leading vendors including Intel, Motorola and Cisco Systems -- all of whom support an organisation called the HomePlug Powerline Alliance."
Doesn't this frighten anyone... (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Doesn't this frighten anyone... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Doesn't this frighten anyone... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Doesn't this frighten anyone... (Score:2)
They say Americans are wasteful, but that's just something else. I wonder what kind of power is required to turn a motor that big?
if you flick that switch at the wall it CAN NOT DO ANYTHING.
Have cheesy horror movies about demonically possessed houses or intricate plans of Death taught you NOTHING?! Just flicking the switch is begging for a freak gust of wind, wandering fly or quantum indecision to flip that sucker back on when you are knuckle deep!
Ah, I
Re:Doesn't this frighten anyone... (Score:2, Informative)
In fact, this has long been a security issue in HomePlug (which is
Re:Doesn't this frighten anyone... (Score:2)
Powerline broadband may be widespread in the future, but the cell phone network gets pretty good coverage right now. Your garbage disposal could have a cell phone build into it. Your toaster could be network aware right now. How would you know? Widespread WiFi presents the same problem.
If someone wants to get you by turning your appliances against you, they can. They don't need powerline bro
Re:Doesn't this frighten anyone... (Score:3)
You've missed the entire home automation discussion then, have you?
Telling your stove to start the cooking program for tonight's dinner certainly is a feature for home automation, as is the ability to ask the stove how much longer is left until the
Re:Doesn't this frighten anyone... (Score:3, Interesting)
Reasons to move to Australia: (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Reasons to move to Australia: (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Reasons to move to Australia: (Score:3, Funny)
Dude, this is
Re:Reasons to move to Australia: (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Reasons to move to Australia: (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Reasons to move to Australia: (Score:2)
Re:Reasons to NOT move to Australia: (Score:3, Funny)
Ah, who am I kidding - I would never leave the house with broadband that fast...
Re:Reasons to NOT move to Australia: (Score:2)
Re:Reasons to NOT move to Australia: (Score:2)
1) Spiders, snakes are rare in Tasmania.
2) In Tas, the water is to cold to swim in (hence sharks are no problem)
3) Maoris are only deadly if you don't know they're from New Zealand, not Australia.
Re:Reasons to NOT move to Australia: (Score:2, Informative)
In addition, you have none of the above bads and no hurricanes, earthquakes et al. Maybe the weather is bad, but who cares if you have that much bandwidth.
Re:Reasons to NOT move to Australia: (Score:2)
Think about the only two Australian celebrity exports - Mick Dundee and Steve Irwin. See what I'm getting at?
Seriously, have cheesy 80s movies taught you NOTHING about the deadliness of crocodiles?!
Re:Reasons to NOT move to Australia: (Score:2)
Re:Reasons to NOT move to Australia: (Score:2)
Secondly, if saying Maoris are a reason not to move to a country isn't racist, I'm not sure what is.
Re:Reasons to NOT move to Australia: (Score:2)
Well other then it would be speciest, I don't think the Maoris will form a coalition and lobby world gov'ts for equal rights.
Re:Reasons to NOT move to Australia: (Score:2)
Re:Reasons to NOT move to Australia: (Score:2)
Are you sure you're not thinking of Kiwis??
This [hps.com] is a Maori.
This [doc.govt.nz] is a Kiwi.
Re:Reasons to NOT move to Australia: (Score:3, Informative)
Deadly Spiders - brown recluse, black widow, though actual deaths are unlikely. Loss of limbs due to gangrene is a more common outcome, and a lot of pain is more common yet.
Deadly Snakes - assorted rattlesnakes, and others. these are likely to cause more damage if you get bit, but bites are much easier to avoid.
Deadly Sharks - we get shark deaths/bites occassionally, though you're much more likely to die by lightning str
Re:Reasons to move to Australia: (Score:2)
Los Angeles (Score:5, Funny)
State of Tasmania? (Score:5, Funny)
Sorry but you just made me come up with this (Score:4, Funny)
What do you get when you cross a Tasmanian Devil and a /.er? A deviled egg-head!
Thanks, folks, I'll be back tomorrow too.
RRARGH! (Score:5, Funny)
NNNNyehhh, what's up doc?
Taz eat hacker rabbit!
Those MB per month limits are awful (Score:4, Interesting)
I bet I can do that in a day or two just patching a game? Or am I reading it wrong?
Re:Those MB per month limits are awful (Score:5, Informative)
So in other words, if you pay for the 4Mb/s at about $80/month, you get 2000MB of free data transfer. So you download at full speed for a little over an hour. After that, every megabyte you download after that costs you a dime. Ouch. And I thought Mediacom had a racket running...
Re:Those MB per month limits are awful (Score:2)
When you are the only BPL provider in the world, I guess you can charge whatever you want.
Re:Those MB per month limits are awful (Score:2)
Re:Those MB per month limits are awful (Score:2)
But it gets worse.
whirlpool [whirlpool.net.au] have this on their front page at the moment (also here [whirlpool.net.au]
From the article:
*shivers* 20MB? Erk.
Many other interesting facts in the article - including a link to ham radio users who've filed comlaints about interference. [wia.org.au]
Home Plug? (Score:2)
Aren't HomePlug and BPL different, or have they merged, or what?
Re:Home Plug? (Score:4, Informative)
HomePlug is also the standard that Motorola is using for their low voltage Canopy system. It operates on the 110/220 side of the transformer, not one the medium voltage lines.
Homeplug has actual hardware based filters to make sure it does not interfere with amateur radio operators. It does not merely change the modulation technique like most BPL providers have done to mitigate interference.
I have cable / upload speed (Score:3, Insightful)
So this new service offers 12Mbps download... but what are the upload speeds?
Re:I have cable / upload speed (Score:3, Informative)
The upload speeds that TasTel (the company that is currently doing this) depend on which "package" the user buys. Here's the relationship:
256kb/64kb
1Mb/256kb
4Mb/1Mb
So if the user chooses the 256kb down package, they get 64 kb up. There is also a 1Mb down/1Mb up package which is somewhat more expensive then their 1Mb/256Kb package.
All these details and more can be found at their website: http://www.tastel.com.au/bpl/index.html [tastel.com.au]
And another question (Score:2)
Another question: how fast is it? "12Mbps" you say? No, that's not how fast it is. That's how "big" the pipe is. What I want to know is: how much latency?
If this is anything like satelite, I wouldnt go near it even if it did come to the US.
Re:I have cable / upload speed (Score:2)
Re:I have cable / upload speed (Score:2)
Re:I have cable / upload speed (Score:2)
They don't enforce the TOS unless you're costing them money... Plus if you pay for the static IP, the TOS becomes much friendlier.
As for your customer service experience there... The proper response to "Click Start, then..." is "Ok." After you get through all that you say "That still didn't work," and then they fix your problem. You better be triple certain the probl
Sad... (Score:3, Informative)
It's kind of sad that these companies have so little respect for the Ham Radio operators.
With all of the evidence showing the damage that the broadband over powerlines causes, this is kind of sad...
Re:Sad... (Score:5, Interesting)
This was a big PR chance. I heard in some areas the ONLY way to get messages passed (especially "Is my brother OK" type Health & Welfare traffic) was by hams.
Re:Sad... (Score:3, Insightful)
We were without power for about a week. During that time the only communications we had were one channel that came in over the rabbit ears on the TV or the radio. The generator and transfer switch I had was able to power much of the house (no A/C) but the cable servic
Re:Sad... (Score:2)
Re:Sad... (Score:3, Funny)
I thought you guys were keen on challenges like this? Like bouncing signal off the Jupiter or finding correct frequency for auntie Tilly's golden teeth or something..
Re:Sad... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Sad... (Score:2)
You are very short-sighted.
Re:Sad... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Sad... (Score:2)
I am all for broadband but giving up HF radio seems like a bad plan.
Re:Sad... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Sad... (Score:2, Informative)
I've tried to be objective about the technology, but especially when I see videos of Hams driving around their neighborhoods with an HF rig dialing through the spectrum and hearing nothing but hum from the power lines transfering BPL signals, I can't say I'm very opto
Re:Sad... (Score:2)
This is an article from the ARRL webpage discussing some work with Motorola at W1AW:
BPL at HQ: ARRL Cooperating in BPL System Experiment
http://www.arrl.org/news/stories/2005/08/29/1/?nc= 1 [arrl.org]
I don't know what the other BPL developers are doing, btw.
Please cut the whining folks, and read up. I thought that hams were a bit more resiliant than this.
-Pete Lee
K7LEE
Re:Sad... (Score:3, Insightful)
Grr... (Score:2, Funny)
power outages (Score:2, Insightful)
A small price to pay though, does anyone know the maximum range on this technology?
Re:power outages (Score:2)
Re:power outages (Score:2)
If anything, this saves you the cost of a UPS
Misleading headline (Score:4, Insightful)
c'mon, guys. Is it asking too much to report the ACTUAL bandwidth used in the trial, instead of some arbitrarily-high number that the users involved will never actually see??
Just makes sense (Score:4, Interesting)
But what's the one thing that all computers have in common? They use electricity! And even if you're generating your own, you're still likely hooked up to the grid so that you can sell your excess back.
I can definitely see broadband over power lines being a big hit in developing countries, since they won't have to worry about the added infrastructure for connecting their residents to the Internet. Add voice over IP and you end up with VOIPOPL: Three products for the price of one (give or take a bit of added overhead).
Re:Just makes sense (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Just makes sense (Score:2, Informative)
Could you please read this, then shut up.
Thanks.
Re:Just makes sense (Score:2)
Powerlines where never designed with having broadband traffic travel through them. They are highly inefficient.
By the time the signals get to your house in the boondocks the signal must have degraded significantly.
Once again, Powerlines were never, ever designed with this use in mind. They are terribly inefficient.
Re:Just makes sense (Score:2)
True. However, DSL seems to work pretty well even if the phone lines it uses were designed for something like 4 kHz of voice bandwidth.
Of all the non-data cables leading to households, TV cable is the only one that was actually designed for high bandwidth. Pity that the way it is deployed makes it usually worse than DSL.
Re:Just makes sense (Score:2)
It only makes sense when considered in a vacuum.
Peaceful coexistence with radio frequencies, however, has yet to be demonstrated.
Consider that you've got RF being transmitted up and down _unshielded_ power lines. Can you say "leakage"? I knew you could. As it stands, the US FCC makes cable TV and broadband providers shit their pants when it comes to leakage, because a certain amount of funding for the FCC comes from fines, and they're not afraid to l
Re:Just makes sense (Score:2)
Paranoia alert... (Score:2, Insightful)
400 Mbps! (Score:3, Interesting)
According to Ehrenfeld, the BPL service will be capable of providing an Internet connection for homes and businesses that is "vastly quicker" than the 24Mbps maximum possible with ADSL2+ technology, which uses analogue telephone lines. Such speeds are so far only being offered by only a couple of ISPs, with several more offering speeds up to 12Mbps.
But what really caught my eye:
"engin and Mitsubishi Electric engineers have worked closely together in both Australia and Japan to incorporate engin's VoIP technology in the 200Mbps BPL product developed by Mitsubishi," said a statement from the VoIP vendor on the trial.
Re:400 Mbps! (Score:2)
Re:400 Mbps! (Score:2)
Re:400 Mbps! (Score:2)
At least I didn't accidentally include an extra zero
Clarification of 'tiny' (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Clarification of 'tiny' (Score:2)
Tasmania is by far the smallest state - it is four times smaller then the second smallest state (Victoria) and forty times smaller then the largest (Western Australia)
Where is the plug for this thing? (Score:2, Funny)
How do I plug in my Powerline BroadBand? Can I surf the web with my monitor? Can this thing run on batteries?
Re:Where is the plug for this thing? (Score:3, Funny)
Tiny? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Tiny? (Score:2)
Re:Tiny? (Score:2)
It is a very nice place though. I'd advise anyone reading this to check it out if they ever feel like seeing Australia. Most tourists like to see stuff like wallabies, koalas, tassie devels and wambats and Tasmania is a great place to see them. Cradle mountain is an especially beautiful place to visit, though it's a little cold.
Re:Tiny? (Score:2)
Re:Tiny? (Score:3, Funny)
Comparing State size, eh?
Texas, USA [wikipedia.org]: 678,907 km^2
Western Australia, Australia [wikipedia.org]: 2,529,875 km^2
Things are always teensy-weensy in Texas.
Radio Frequency interference (Score:4, Interesting)
The American Radio Relay league has information on BPL in the USA at
http://www.arrl.org/tis/info/HTML/plc/ [arrl.org]
The Australian Government has information on BPL at
http://www.acma.gov.au/ACMAINTER.2490560:STANDARD
Can't Wait (Score:2, Funny)
BPL plays hell with radio. (Score:5, Informative)
This fatal flaw will seriously limit the way that BPL can be deployed and will decrease the reliability of a BPL system in any area where it is possible that nearby radio transmitters could be operating. Under the FCC's rules, BPL is an unlicensed device that must accept any interference caused to it by authorized radio services. In the past, and through decades of experience, such interference is rare to other broadband services, such as DSL, cable or satellite. However, in all of the BPL areas tested for susceptibility so far, the unshielded wiring that is used by BPL apparently picks up nearby radio transmitters and overload or otherwise degraded the performance of the system. Although this has been seen at power levels as low as 5 watts from Amateur Radio transmitters, Amateur Radio transmitters can use as much as 1500 watts of power, greatly extending area over which BPL will be unable to tune out these over-the-air signals.
See the ARRL.org website for more info. http://www.arrl.org/tis/info/HTML/plc/ [arrl.org] 73 de W7COM
Re:BPL plays hell with radio. (Score:2)
Combining the two sides that have been presented, BPL breaks amateur radio, but amateur radio breaks BPL back?
Okay... so, stupid question (Score:2)
Okay. So how hard is it to add shielding?
I mean, serious question. It isn't like we'd have to rewrap the entire fifty zillion miles of power lines in the U.S., or anything. Broadband at this point is mostly a "last mile" problem. The only wires you'd have to reshield are those wires in the last mile. Once you've done that, getting lots of fiber or something directly to the NOC is easy.
Re:Okay... so, stupid question (Score:3, Insightful)
Which would add greatly to the weight of the line, so they'd have to re-engineer the whole distribution system, pole spacings, guy wire
Re:If BPL mucks w radio, it's not FCC prob (Score:2)
Now get back to http://monorails.org/ [monorails.org]
Re:If BPL mucks w radio, it's not FCC prob (Score:2)
Vote For Dick! http://falkenbury.com/ [falkenbury.com]
In the US (Score:3, Informative)
Hackable? Homebrew? (Score:2)
Muhahaha!
I wonder if I need to use Cat5 cable or lamp wire?...
A couple of questions. (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:A couple of questions. (Score:2)
What's the real capacity (Score:3, Interesting)
Hello broadband over power lines, goodbye radio (Score:5, Informative)
While you may not think that your neighbor yammering on his CB, or another neighbor listening to broadcast from Radio Swaziland,or listening talk radio on AM broadcast are very important, there are other communications that are also disrupted: HF radio is used by emergency response agencies all over the world. The inadequacy of communications (among other failures of emergency services) was well demonstrated by the recent Hurricane Katrina disaster. BPL will make this worse.
HF radio, unlike cellular telephones and other centralized radio systems, has the ability to comunicate over long distances without any intermediate infrastructure. The is vital for disaster communications where the infrastructure is overloaded or destroyed.
Worst hit would be the poorer nations of the world, where telephone service is often unavailable or unreliable, and much of the communication has depended on HF radio. While the interference at a distance will be less, it will still be strong, very easily strong enough to make a weak signal calling for help in Afria disappear in BPL noise generated in Australia or the US.
It goes both ways: HF radio can also interfere with BPL. I think that, in an area where BPL is interfering with Amateur Radio, that the Amateurs will not hesitate to use more powerful transmitters (if they can afford the electric bill for doing so). These will disrupt BPL, quite easily to the point of being unusable. And I doubt the BPL ISP will let you out of the contract because of such interference! So don't sign up. It's not worth the headache, and the guilt, and angry hams and other angry HF radio users.
Few Facts about electricity in Tasmania (Score:2)
Re:Ham radio? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Ham radio? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Ham radio? (Score:3, Interesting)
It curr