Posted on 10/17/2005 10:11:58 AM PDT by rawhide
CINCINNATI--The idea has been around for years. In Spain and elsewhere in Europe, utility companies have long offered high-speed Internet service to consumers over their power lines.
But American utilities are only now beginning to roll out broadband connections on their grid.
For Jim Hofstetter, a salesman for Cadbury Schweppes, the food and beverage company, this new option was far better than the high-speed connection he used for years from his local cable provider.
"I would never go back now that I have this," said Hofstetter, who often works from his home office in the Hyde Park neighborhood of Cincinnati. He pays $30 a month for the service from Current Communications, an Internet service provider, which uses the power lines run by Cinergy, the local utility in Cincinnati. That cost is about $15 cheaper than comparable Internet access from either Cincinnati Bell or Time Warner Cable. The Current service can be piped into any electrical outlet in Hofstetter's home, with no reduction in speed even when he, his wife and their three daughters are online at the same time. All that is needed is a baseball-size jack that plugs into the wall and is connected to a computer with an Ethernet cable.
Known as broadband over power line, or BPL, the service is poised to challenge the cable and phone companies that dominate the high-speed Internet market. Instead of burying cables and rewiring homes, BPL providers use the local power grid, which means that any home with electricity could get the service.
(Excerpt) Read more at news.com.com ...
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Yeah, one of my employees is a Ham and is always complaining about this. At the same time, he lives out beyond the broadband services, so he is caught in a quandry...sorta mixed emotions, like watching your mother-in-law drive over a cliff in your new Hummer.
BTTT
Thanks for that link! I've listened to around a dozen of those samples. So far, a couple of them sounded similar, but I haven't really found a match yet. I'll keep digging...
Yes, it does! That's precisely what I thought it was at first. I initially assumed I had a HAM nearby that was keying the signal. After I started paying closer attention, it sounds too fast to be keyed manually, and it also sounds like there are start and stop bits framing the data.
I pick up something similar on my baby monitor and my VoIP phone.
So, your implant is on the blink too? (j/k) Actually, I'm happy to find somebody else who has been hearing this interference. I assume you're still in the D.C. burbs (per your homepage)? How often are you hearing it? I sometimes hear two or three bursts per day, but usually it's only one -- and sometimes I don't hear anything for days. I've been hearing at least one burst per week for around six months though.
I'm sure there's a perfectly reasonable explanation.
As am I, but I'd really like to know what it is...
Mr. President, thank you for taking time out of your busy schedule to participate in this thread. We are so very honored.
I could see possibilities here for the gas companies, too, so long as all their pipe is metal. Use the pipes as waveguides.
Can ham use spread spectrum?
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