Unique Broadband Over Powerline Project Planned For Mosques 205
Lucas123 writes "Broadband over powerline (BPL) provider Velchip is heading up a project that will offer 60 million very unique network users an unlimited high speed Internet connection of 224Mbps at a cost of only around RM5 ($1.58) per user per month. That's the cheapest, fastest internet connection in the world. The network is slated for use in the $14 billion 'Smart Mosque' project, which will be rolled out over three years in Indonesia and will link together 400,000 mosques. To add some perspective, in the US Verizon FiOS currently offers up to 30 Mbps downloads and 5 Mbps uploads starting at $42.99 a month. BPL modems use existing electrical power lines to deliver high speed Internet access and data transmission."
Unlimited? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Unlimited? (Score:5, Insightful)
While this will no doubt allow the ISP to deliver cache/proxy data very quickly, it will not be financially viable to provide very fast live-internet down this pipe. E.g anything that can be classified as a web-application will probably still be quite average/slow speeds.
The price comes about from using an existing infrastructure, as you know the biggest cost in rolling out a network is the transmission medium. (Especially if it's not your expense to maintain it.)
I'd be *delighted* to get close to max speed. . . (Score:3, Insightful)
As the parent said, a fast connection to your ISP is relatively meaningless. I currently have TimeWarner RoadRunner cable. I can't complain about it *too* much. Overall it provides a pretty decent internet experience.
But, I know that the maximum download speed I ever got was somewhere around 6000 kbps (downloading a tv show from Amazon.c
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BitTorrent happily eats up most of the bandwidth thrown at it (in excess of 150 mbps on two 100 mbps lines, given a few good peers). That way, even multi-cd distributions just fly through the series of tubes
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Re:Unlimited? (Score:4, Funny)
Excuse me... Excuse me... (Score:2, Funny)
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I expect this post will also be modded down by a moron mod!
Whoa there Nelly! (Score:4, Insightful)
No. It's not the fastet, because it doesn't exist.
To add some perspective, in the states Verizon FiOS currently offers up to 30 Mbps downloads and 5 Mbps uploads starting at $42.99 a month.
Yes, they do. Right now. Who knows what Verizon will be offering when (if) these guys get this network going. Awesome. The US still has better internet access than much of the third world.
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I agree that we're well behind many parts of the world when it comes to fast Internet access. However, you can't take the single, well-publicized case of the Swedish lady with a 40 Gb/s connection on top of specialized networking gear, and extrapolate that to make any meaningful statements about the overall state of broadband availability in Sweden versus in the United States.
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I also seem to remember something quite a while back here on slashdot about some annual internet usage survey, which also kind of highlighted that the US is leading the pack in technology, but that Europe/Far East are leading in technology adoption.
Having the 'might' of the US IT
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You must be so proud.
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Re:Whoa there Nelly! (Score:5, Insightful)
Because bad internet access is more profitable. If everybody had gigabit lines to their homes, it would be very hard to sell "faster" business lines to businesses at an inflated cost. By artificially limiting the low end of the market, they inflate the value of the high end, and hold the whole thing together by passing laws to block any competition. Isn't capitalism grand?
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Because you and your neighbors will not always be the best at absolutely everything despite your charmed American position.
It is indeed going to be a long fall from that high horse on which you ride.
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You sound like you speak from experience.
~S
Third World? (Score:5, Interesting)
Republicans have never been big on competition. Just ask their friends who helped to write the 1996 Telecommunications Act. That whole "Republican Revolution" was really a revolution for their *Republican* investor friends.
Bear Stearns will quietly tell you that Bush just wanted to bail his friends out. That's the free market for ya.
Until the market gets *really* free from the incumbents, we aren't going to see very high speeds on our internet connections. Here's a great link on the subject of how Bush and his friends let it happen:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/08/28/AR2007082801990_pf.html [washingtonpost.com]
Yes, Republicans like free markets, as long as its free for *Republican* investors to pillage, rape and burn.
So the next time you wonder why you're still using DSL at 1.5 Mbs, just ask Bush. At least he knows what a checkout scanner in s supermarket looks like. (Or does he?) Or you can go here: www.speedmatters.org
Enjoy.
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I'm perfectly happy with my DSL connection from a CLEC competing with the monopoly phone and cable company. I don't mind the ~14Mbps I get most of the time. If I need more speed than that, I turn off the television that's provided over the same line. In fact, that's just what I did last night, when I had a big ISO to download.
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I have a 100Mbit connection (Japan) that runs at about 83Mbit, which is way above average.
I have noticed absolutely no difference in speed from when I had a 50Mbit ADSL line that actually only ran at 4Mbit. None.
BitTorrent is still slow as hell. My game ping is still on the highish end.
I think all this focus on the speed of one's connection is hogwash. ISPs throttle certain traffic, or the server you're connecting to doesn't have that much bandwidth for you, or you're limited by all the other, slow
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Maybe part of the problem is that you're a foreigner who is after non-local content.
Stream yourself some NHK or torrent one of those fine Japanese movies about the guys with really long moustaches and watch the bits fly!
I know that's how it works where I live (the warmer, beachier part of Asia).
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Verizon offers FiOS "right now" .... in limited markets.
FiOS isn't available in my neighborhood (I live within spitting distance of the Microsoft Redmond campus) and probably won't be for a decade. Verizon just finished rebuilding its telephone system due to a road widening project. They replaced 40 year old copper with .... more copper. They are not likely to replace it again until if has depreciated.
And, to shut down the argument that the US is a different market than other countries due to populatio
Spec needs to be clearer (Score:5, Insightful)
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224Mps divided by 60 millions users? Aren't we talking telegraph speeds at that bit rate?
The news headline and article are bullshit. (Score:4, Interesting)
Just marketing bullshit.
Who cares if there are 1500 possible mosques visitors in each mosque?
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Thanks for the information.
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There's no known BPL Internet access network in the world that is delivering 224 Mbs to end users. The few systems in the US are delivering speeds in the 1 to 8 Mbs range.
fritz their brains with unshielded RF (Score:3, Insightful)
i sure hope they don't fritz their brains by exposing themselves to that much HARSHLY modulated unshielded RF energy...
Bad Idea (Score:3, Informative)
It might just about work in a country where there is no radio or TV broadcasting or mobile telephony to interfere with, and no panic about the effects of stray RF waves on the human body.
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As far as RF exposure goes, these are power lines. The power levels that BPL uses are way below the EMP emissions that are coming off the power lines as the result of.. oh, I don't know, maybe the fact that they are carrying alternating current oscillating at 50 or 60 Hertz?
Now, there is concern amongst users of HF and low-band VHF. Public safety, amateur, mariti
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To get more bandwidth, you have to modulate a high-frequency carrier onto the power line first. This gets over the pro
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And since you need two full cycles to transmit a single bit
Maybe if you use a really old fasioned modulation scheme with a single carrier etc.
According to nyquist you can in theory get two symbols per Hz of bandwidth. In practice you can't get quite this good but techniques like QAM combined with OFDM (as used in digital TV) can get pretty close.
The number of bits you can get per symbol depends
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So you use five 6 MHz QAM1024 signals (each one carrying 50 Mb/s) with a center of 6, 12, 18, 24, and 30 MHz. That still keeps you completely contained within HF, which was my point.
I don't know of anywhere in the world where television and cellular phones live below the VHF boundary.
On the other hand, I wouldn't want to be trying to work 40 meters anywhere near this hypothetical system.
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There are 2 different concepts:
1) Using high voltage long distance lines
2) Using household voltage lines and distances
The first approach has been pretty much abandoned. The second is very much alive and competing fiercely with Wi-Fi.
There are 2 competing camps, one being HomePlug and the other using chips from a Spanish company, ES2.
I have conducted trials with HomePlug AV in a marina. The claim is 200Mbps but you won't even get
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In countries where triphase power is delivered to each group of three dwellings from a big transformer at the end of the street (so each individual house is on single-phase power) it works reasonably well. The combin
The best place is probably (Score:2)
Could someone enlighten me? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Could someone enlighten me? (Score:5, Informative)
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Re:Could someone enlighten me? (Score:4, Insightful)
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I can see several of these mosques from my balcony. If 60% of the population is going there, then the total population of Malaysia is about 12.
BPL also trashes the airwaves (Score:2)
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It is quite possible for a BPL system in Indonesia to wipe out HF communications on the other side of the world, given proper ionosph
bpl is a hoax (Score:5, Insightful)
BPL is deploying in the U.S. (Score:4, Informative)
But... deployment here is three years behind schedule. Customers of two substations have it, but I don't know how well it is working. The company claims some equipment problem.
Rural users are really looking forward to this, if it works, or any alternative to satellite. The electrical co-op (non-profit utility, like a credit union compared to a bank, established in the 1930's) said the price would be $25/month. Satellite is $40 with terrible contracts and equipment costs. Not to mention gamers cannot live with the 0.7+ second lag.
There is no alternative in rural areas, where our cell service is marginal. Dialup with images off has been fun! More important than images off is selectively blocking Flash.
Deployment: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Power_line_communication#Deployments [wikipedia.org] But see the next section, "Concluded Deployments" with a long list of place where BPL has been dismantled.
As for the tech. aspects, note you can run internet over a fence wire.
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Correction, the price here for BPL is $30/month.
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There's a perfectly good alternative: run fiber. I'm sure you already have phone lines - decent network infrastructure is the 21st century version of that. And no, it's not "impossible" or "too expensive" - it's "doing it right". Being in a rural area with a electricity co-op should just make this easier. It makes no sense to screw around with crap technologies like BPL.
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Ok so the worth of freedom to slashdot users (Score:2, Insightful)
Great to know.
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Note for the Slashdot Grammar Council (Score:3, Insightful)
But I have a tough time understanding that there could be 60 million "very" unique network users. I'd suppose that they'd just be unique.
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Not with your argument, but we would have trouble making sense of why you think being redundant has any value, and then overlook the possibility that the intended rhetorical effect may be the opposite of what you hoped.
Put simply, if something is "unique", then say so. If you're looking to describe other qualities, reach for a thesaurus. There's no need to dumb down the language for everyone when there's lots of good words [reference.com] you can use.
--
Grammar Weenie
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This is typical of what others are doing (Score:2)
We need to do this to avoid becoming a third world telecommunications country
BPL screws up shortwave radio (Score:2)
http://www.usatoday.com/tech/news/200 [usatoday.com]
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I, as well as many others I'm sure, have submitted numerous news stories to /. about the flagrant bias toward BPL and the facts being covered up by the FCC. Oddly, none ever get posted. Mod me troll, I don't care; I think it's obvious what side of the issue the /. mods are on.
http://www.arrl.org/tis/info/HTML/plc/ [arrl.org]
RFI (Score:2)
Those dang laws of physics! (Score:2)
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OT'ish: shielded powerlines (Score:2)
It's a Miracle (Score:2)
What about linking up the schools instead?
Wonky math (Score:2)
Using the numbers from the summary (because RTFA would be too much work), FiOS appears to come out cheaper per user, though possibly with a bandwidth hit. From the article, the cost is $1.58/mo per user for 60 million users spread across 400,000 mosques.
60,000,000*1.58/400,000=$237/mo per mosque
FiOS is $42.99/mo per site (mosques in this case).
237/42.99=5.51 times more expensive than FiOS, though they supposedly get (224/30=) 7.46 times the bandwidth based on download speeds. However, according to t
In perspective (Score:2)
And most mosques in Indonesia are spread amongst the poorest communities, where the average household income will be much lower and contributions to their local mosque lower still.
That US$1.58 becomes quite a significan
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Cheap at half Your Life! (Score:2)
And it still costs a month's wages in DurkaDurkaStan.
Re:Indonesia? (Score:5, Interesting)
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1. Power lines break during storms because the wind cracks the towers, causing them to fall over.
2. Once broken, the electricity company will cut the power. It will then (but not before!) be safe to steal the lines.
3. If you are using laptops as footwear, you are doing it wrong...
Re:It'll never happen (Score:5, Informative)
Re:It'll never happen (Score:5, Insightful)
Twisted pair copper is self-shielding; it's one of the reasons why we use it today in telephony instead of the old open straight wire.
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Telephone signals are almost balanced, but the electronics are kinda funky, so they actually give off large amounts of interference. This c
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Okay, then you're just wrong. Telephone lines are neither; their loop system is almost like a balanced signal, but not close enough to actually prevent interference, and they broadcast a very strong electromagnetic signal that you can pick up with sensitive radio equipment from a few tens of meters away (or with a couple of transistors and a 1.5v cell at a distance of a few cm). Whether or not the cable is twisted has no impact on thi
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Although Wikipedia isn't the end-all-be-all of knowledge and information, read the article on twisted pair: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twisted_pair [wikipedia.org] . Someone else apparently says the twisting tends to reduce interference.
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We use twisted pair cables without shield because it's the cheapest. Not necessarily because it's the best at minimizing noise.
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To ideally represent a square wave, one requires an infinite portion of the spectrum. (Ever seen a sinc function?) - that is impossible with current technology. therefore, we modulate signals, such as square waves and transform them to a finite bandwidth approximate representation.
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People should be free to worship their deity of choice in their own way. If they want to do so sitting in front of a computer screen looking at pictures of naked women then who are you to judge them?
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Why would a mosque need internet access? Isn't it suppose to be a place of worship, not an internet cafe?
In poor areas, the church or mosque or what have you is often also the center of community life. They don't have all the options available to urban first worlders. You still often see this even in the US today in small, rural areas. It was even more common in our agrarian past when Sunday was your only day off and the one big chance to go into town just to socialize.
I suspect this is why mosques hold such sway in their communities. Far as a community "center", there isn't anything but the mosque. Your only
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But, but, religion is "special". It's not PC to attack any superstition, only purely secular beliefs. Americans have been brainwashed by the superstition-based attacks between superstitions to think that ALL superstitions should be left critically unexamined. They have also been brainwashed into differentiating doctrine from practice, which differentiation is actually a dodge superstitions use for self-defense. "Don't judge X-religion by its fo
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Oh yes, one of the many wonderful public libraries that dot the villages and towns of Indonesia.
They better invent secular kurdism as well then.