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FCC adopts rules for broadband over power line
Mobile Radio Technology ^ | Oct 15, 2004 | Donny Jackson and Glenn Bischoff

Posted on 10/18/2004 6:43:55 AM PDT by Denver Ditdat

FCC commissioners yesterday unanimously approved rules for broadband over power line (BPL) technology, which policymakers hope will provide the elusive third broadband access line into most U.S. homes and reduce—or eliminate—the need to regulate the broadband industry.

Certainly the most outspoken opposition to BPL has come from the amateur radio community, which has claimed that BPL will create interference with its operations. FCC Chairman Michael Powell called amateur radio operators “an important resource” and expressed hope that the rules the FCC has created will protect them, but he said obstructing the deployment of BPL is not an option.

“The potential for the American economy is too great—is too enormous, is too potentially groundbreaking—to sit idly by and allow any claim or any possible speculative fear to keep us from trying to drive this technology and drive America into the broadband future,” Powell said.

Powell believes the ubiquity of the U.S. electrical grid makes BPL an ideal platform to provide affordable broadband nationwide, particularly in currently underserved rural areas. It also offers the promise of network-based competition with DSL and cable-modem service as a wired broadband option.

“In addition to universal service, we talk so often about competition—well, here it is,” Powell said. “All economists will tell you magic happens when you find the third way.” But amateur radio proponents question the economic benefits of BPL.

“If it’s not economical to run fiber or cable, they’re certainly not going to be putting repeaters on power lines every two miles to get a signal out to one guy’s house, get him to pay 30 bucks a month for the service and then expect to make money on it,” said David Patton special assistant to the CEO for the Amateur Radio Relay League. “It’s just a bad investment.”

Patton said there is some question as to whether electrical utilities will be able to deploy BPL—“They can’t even supply power. There are power outages everywhere,” he said—and added that existing technologies such as microwave, satellite and Wi-Fi would do a better job of bringing broadband services to rural customers without the interference concerns.

“When you walk around the library with your [Wi-Fi-enabled] computer, you’re using frequencies that are pretty innocuous,” Patton said. “Satellite service could be cheaper, but if you really want broadband, you can get it [with satellite] pretty much anywhere you want.”

Patton said the ARRL board is considering its options, which could include putting pressure on Congress to draft legislation that would protect amateur radio operators and challenging the FCC’s order in court, though that would come “somewhere down the line.”

In other news, the FCC allocated spectrum in the 2.0 GHz and 2.3 GHz bands for the relocation of federal operations that had been using the 1.7 GHz and 2.1 GHz bands. These airwaves previously had been reallocated to private sector entities for the provisioning of advanced wireless services, including 3G services. The action is “an important step” towards an auction of 90 MHz of spectrum for AWS, the FCC said.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Government; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events; Technical
KEYWORDS: amateur; amateurradio; arrl; bpl; electricalpower; fcc; ham; hamradio; interference; noise; powerlines; qrn; radio; utilities
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To: ridesthemiles
Again, HAM radio is a hobby and one with greatly diminishing interest as well. Please, do not force your hobby above the nationwide economic needs for competitive broadband.

And as another poster mentioned. Yes fiber to RF towers is coming. 4G will be a revolution with Ethernet Speeds on full mobility.

And CB radios? Give me a break! They are mostly useless unless within close proximity or for RF skip junkies. This is old technology that should be put to bed now! May BPL be the long deserved nail in that coffin and a path to it's successor. What a sad joke that industry is! The CB manufacturers are still pushing 30 year old technology to this day without a meaningful technological addition worth even considering in a far stretch.
21 posted on 10/18/2004 5:14:53 PM PDT by off-roader
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To: off-roader
"IMSO, Amateur Radio GHz 99.5% arcane hobby and %.5% beneficial to society. The whinings of the ARRL are self serving, ludicrous and narrow sighted. Technology available to non-hobbyists continues to advance, ever diminishing the benefits of Amateur Radio to society while at the same time, the Amateur Radio Community struggles radically to gain membership. In fact, the common track is to continually reduce aptitude requirements for licensing. A death spiral I see!"

Remember those words come the next hurricane, big forest fire, or attack on the infrastructure. ANd stick to them - and refuse any information that came your way via ham radio.

What would you have rural police, fire and EMS depts. on low band do when their calls can't get thru due to BPL interference? Someone who's an expert on off roading is very familiar with conditions in remote rural areas by definition - and thus has the answer to that problem. Right?
22 posted on 10/18/2004 9:14:40 PM PDT by Wampus SC
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To: ridesthemiles

All good points.

The FCC ought to just go ahead and upgrade all the Techs to General right now. They wouldn't be getting anything useful, now.


23 posted on 10/18/2004 9:17:05 PM PDT by Wampus SC
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To: off-roader
Amateur radio engineers have used the amateur spectrum as a testbed for many of the wireless technolgies and packet structures now seen in the mass market. Over 10 years ago, two of my friends had a 10 mbit microwave link between their PCs, and the transmission theories behind their links are the same that were eventually incorporated into the 802.11 standards. Additionally, hams were doing digital spread spectrum years before the technology made it into cordless phones and other mass market uses.
24 posted on 10/18/2004 9:24:28 PM PDT by July 4th (You need to click "Abstimmen")
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To: Varmint Al

Need your professional opinion over here Al !


25 posted on 10/18/2004 9:28:19 PM PDT by Squantos (Be polite. Be professional. But, have a plan to kill everyone you meet. ©)
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To: Denver Ditdat; EchoLane; lainie
FCC Chairman Michael Powell called amateur radio operators “an important resource” and expressed hope that the rules the FCC has created will protect them, but he said obstructing the deployment of BPL is not an option.

Unacceptable. I am flabbergasted by this man's total disregard of the public service we hams provide, all for a business plan.

26 posted on 10/19/2004 2:52:47 PM PDT by TechJunkYard (http://scaryjohnkerry.com/)
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To: Denver Ditdat; JoJo Gunn; elmer fudd
Related topic:

Top electronic makers to set standards for power-line networks ( Japanese manufacturers )

27 posted on 01/13/2005 2:21:53 PM PST by Ernest_at_the_Beach (A Proud member of Free Republic ~~The New Face of the Fourth Estate since 1996.)
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