Dan,

there's one very big assumption in your statement: cost of BPL for metering is 
economical or workable in the regulatory model.  Forget value added services 
for a moment, the cost often cannot be burdened on the rate payer (regulatory 
constraint).  So, funding this sort of effort is non-trivial.

Best regards,
Christian

--
Sent from my BlackBerry.  

-----Original Message-----
From: Daniel Golding <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Mon, 22 Jan 2007 18:52:45 
To:Niels Bakker <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Cc:nanog@merit.edu
Subject: Re: Google wants to be your Internet

 
One interesting point - they plan to use Broadband over Power Line (BPL) 
technology to do this. Meter monitoring is the killer app for BPL, which can 
then also be used for home broadband, Meter reading is one of the top costs and 
trickiest problems for utilities. 

- Dan
 


On Jan 22, 2007, at 12:28 PM, Niels Bakker wrote:



* [EMAIL PROTECTED]: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>  (Jim Shankland) [Mon 22 Jan 
2007, 18:21 CET]: 
"Travis H." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > writes: 
IIRC, someone representing the electrical companies approached someone 
representing network providers, possibly the IETF, to ask about the feasibility 
of using IP to monitor the electrical meters throughout the US....
The response was "yeah, well, maybe with IPv6". 


Which is nonsense.  More gently, it's only true if you not only want to use IP 
to monitor electrical meters, but want the use the (global) Internet to monitor 
electrical meters.


I'd love to hear the business case for why my home electrical meter needs to be 
directly IP-addressable from an Internet cafe in Lagos. 


It's not nonsense.  Those elements need to be unique.  RFC1918 isn't unique 
enough (think what happens during a corporate merger).




        -- Niels. 

Reply via email to