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| reply to djrobx Re: ABTG/CON-ED BPL is FCC part 15 COMPLIANT
ABTG/CON-ED BPL is FCC part 15 COMPLIANT !!!!!!!!!!!!!!
RE: ARRL lies caught again !!! =======================================
Chris Olert, Consolidated Edison spokesperson, says that conEdison is in compliance with the FCC's radio frequency interference "parameters"
Broadband over Power Line World #27
New York City, New York March 23, 2005
By Marc Strassman Reporter Broadband over Power Line World Broadband Wireless Access World Grid World Unwired LA Etopia Media News Networks
This page and its contents are copyright © 2005 by Etopia Media News Networks. All rights in all media reserved.
The ARRL, an association of amateur radio operators, recently filed a complaint with the Federal Communications Commission in Washington, D.C., alleging that the broadband over power line (BPL) trial now being conducted in Briarcliff Manor, New York, by Consolidated Edison and Ambient Corporation continues to produce radio frequency emissions that seriously interfere with and impair the ability of ham radio operators to use their FCC-licensed radio stations.
You can listen to comments about this situation from Dave Sumner, CEO of the ARRL, by clicking here.
» www.etopiamedia.net/bplw/pages/bplw24-5551212.html
You can read Mr. Sumner's remarks to a recent conference about different means of delivering broadband Internet access, which was held at Columbia University, by clicking here.
Etopia Media's Broadband over Power Line World (BPLW) spoke briefly today with Chris Olert, a spokesperson for Consolidated Edison, to get that organization's take on the ARRL complaint.
Mr. Olert told BPLW "the FCC has acknowledged that Con Edison complies with its parameters."
To listen to Mr. Olert's comments on this subject in their entirety, click here.
» www.etopiamedia.net/bplw/audio/chrisolert2.0.wma | |   not BPL
| 200mbps BPL-powers 2 HDTVs + 4 regular TVs sharing one electric wire---> CEBIT, GERMANY
The mains attraction
Further to my story about the 200Mbit/sec mains links (see elsewhere on this site) here is a picture of one in action. It uses modules from the Spanish company DS2 and is delivering two HD video streams at around 25Mbits/sec each, and four standard TV streams. You may just be able to make out the plug-in DS2 modems that do the trick they look like mains power adapters. Panasonic claims its techology is unique in offering quality of service that is guaranteed timely delivery of packets. But developers of both rival techologies say they too support QoS, and there certainly seemed to be no dropped frames in the demonstration I saw. You wont be able to buy those DS2 modems the company sells its technology for others to use in products. But booth neighbour Corinex, which uses DS2 technology, says it will be selling a 90-euro modem into the UK in a couple of months.
» labs.pcw.co.uk/2005/03/_further_to_my_.html
» biz.yahoo.com/iw/041026/074896.html?printer=1 | |   not BPL
| SEE IT WORKS: »vnuuk.typepad.com/.shared/image.···/ds2.jpg
FROM: CEBIT- GERMANY: look at this picture of 2 HDTVs + 4 TVs connected to 1 Broadband over Power Line modem: | |   no 4 BPL
| Telecom Trends: BPL Poised for Rapid Growth as access technology Posted on: 03/24/2005
Broadband over power line (BPL), a technology that uses the electricity power grid to bring broadband signals into buildings, is ready to take off, according to a report from Telecom Trends International Inc. Global revenue will reach $4.4 billion by 2011, says the firm.
Telecom Trends says that broadband power line communications is well-positioned to compete head on with DSL and cable modem technologies for a share of the broadband access market.
According to the report, there were significant BPL commercial rollouts last year, and dozens of trials are taking place on all the continents. The BPL access services market generated $57.1 million in revenue worldwide in 2004.
The previously single-purpose electricity distribution system now has a new function, says Naqi Jaffery, president at Telecom Trends. There are no longer any serious technical limitations to the deployment of BPL for high-speed Internet access, he adds.
While there is no global standard for BPL access, each vendor offers its own proprietary solution, says the firm, although BPL does use existing infrastructure, which lowers the cost of deployment and provisions services at competitive prices.
Jaffery says every household connected to the power grid can be offered BPL by the power utility in partnership with the appropriate vendor. As the grid becomes the so-called third wire to the premises, the massive scale presented throughout the world will drive costs ever lower, he points out.
» www.phoneplusmag.com/hotnews/53h24124455.html | |
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