NEW LIFE FOR BPL
 
http://www.itbusinessedge.com/blogs/cip/?p=453&nr=VDC

 
Stick a fork in it: a broadband over powerline post mortem
 
http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20081023-stick-a-fork-in-it-a-broadband-over-powerline-post-mortem.html
 
The full stories are at the links, there are excerpts below:
 
NEW LIFE FOR BPL
 
For years, the broadband over powerline (BPL) sector has tried to gain a firm 
footing. The idea is that a low level of broadband connectivity – somewhere 
north of dialup and south of DSL and cable modems – can be provisioned through 
the power system and in-home electrical wiring. The electrical industry would 
gain both from broadband revenue and the closer monitoring, measurement and 
control of power distribution.
 
BPL never quite worked out. However, the communications and power industries 
still see sparks when they are around each other. Google has joined the Demand 
Response and Smart Grid Coalition (DRSG), a group that includes companies that 
make sophisticated metering and demand control equipment. 
 
[snip]
Perhaps BPL is not dead. IBM said that it is partnering with International 
Broadband Electric Communications (IBEC) to deploy the platform at electric 
cooperatives in the east. Much of the electrical grid is comprised of rural 
cooperatives. BPL is particularly enticing for these areas, which often lack 
broadband connectivity. BPL has encountered disappointments and it may work 
this time because of better technology – that, clearly, is where Big Blue comes 
in — and the rural focus.
 
Though even its most enthusiastic fan wouldn’t say that BPL has lived up to 
expectations, there are some projects under way. For instance, the Midwest 
Energy Cooperative, working under a grant from the U.S. Department of 
Agriculture, is deploying the technology in its 12-county Michigan, Indiana and 
Ohio footprint, with services starting early next year.
 
 
Stick a fork in it: a broadband over powerline post mortem
 
Broadband over powerline (BPL) has joined the choir invisible, is pushing up 
the daisies, is an ex-broadband technology. Smart grids, which don't require 
broadband speeds, are moving forward, however. 
 
[snip]
Broadband Reports picked up on a story from last week about Manassas, 
Virginia's BPL network, which was one of the earliest markets, and which never 
attracted more than several hundred subscribers. Local amateur radio operators 
(hams) complained bitterly about early generations of BPL equipment, which they 
alleged caused interference on licensed bands. (Hams use bands in which they've 
been granted primary or secondary licenses, giving them priority over 
unintentional emitters—almost everything that carries electricity is such—and 
unlicensed uses, such as WiFi, where unlicensed users have access to the same 
frequencies.) 
 
The Manassas operator, Comtek, tried to sell its network to Smart Grid LLC 
earlier this year, but the deal didn't go through. The city council opted to 
fund the network for the next couple of years to ease customers off and test 
its own smart-grid applications. 

[snip]
 Why did BPL implode? It's pretty clear that competition from newer 
fiber-to-the-home and to the node networks (Verizon FiOS and AT&T U-verse, to 
name two), as well as increased speeds now possible on DSL and cable systems 
left BPL an expensive and unattractive option. 
 
The head of Current told me in 2006 that he could feed three channels of 30Mbps 
over powerlines from a given substation. Substations serve from a few hundred 
people in rural areas to 20,000 in dense urban neighborhoods. An aggregate of 
100Mbps for 20,000 sounds paltry, but the technology allowed subdividing 
sections by installing data isolators on the lines into smaller hunks. 
 
It's unclear whether that approach worked in reality, as despite my efforts to 
get follow up information from Current starting in December 2006, I never heard 
another peep about actual performance, subscribers signed up, or any other 
metrics. The company's site now focuses on smart-grid applications. 
 
[snip]
Let's not mourn BPL's passing too much. It was never even an also-ran 
technology, because it didn't run much. Its tests and inroads will likely lead 
to large-scale smart-grid adoption. In Texas, TXU-cum-Oncor purchased what 
Current deployed, and is perfectly happy to push forward and reap the savings 
in that hot climate. Anywhere there's air conditioning, smart grids will likely 
propser. 
 
FYI.
 
73,
Curt Phillips W4CP
Raleigh, NC USA
 
 
year.
 
 


      
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