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Owen Duffy wrote in
: Dave Oldridge wrote in : Barnard Peters wrote in news ![]() Wouldn't it be possible to place a filter at your meter that would shunt the BPL signal to ground for the whole neighborhood? Probably not. But a couple of companies, including Motorola have BPL systems that do NOT interfere with amateur radio services at all. The problem seems to be getting regulatory agencies to mandate such systems rather than the sloppy ones they seem to have been bribed to permit. Read the ARRL's story on Motorola LV: 'Less than two years after announcing its Powerline LV Access BPL product, Motorola has decided to suspend product development and to devote its resources to more promising markets, industry sources say.' Full story at http://www.arrl.org/news/stories/2007/04/25/102/?nc=1 . That is a reduction in focus on Access BPL, and the form with the widest impact, but that is only one form of the BPL scourge. Dave, perhaps what you see in me as pessimism is more realism, and it is born out of working in the telecommunications industry, understanding the carriage market and the challenges in competetive broadband delivery. I have also measured BPL emission on the street, analysed measurements by others and written / reviewed many reports on the impact of BPL emissions. I have a good understanding of the impact, and the BS of the 'it won't affect me' justication of apathy. The transformation of ham radio to the province of six hour hams with their shack on their belt impacts the sustainability of ham radio. They do not have the knowledge and experience, the credibility to challenge the threat. The 'it won't affect me' approach and redneck solutions help to divert attention from the BPL problem. BPL might crash and burn of its own accord, and I frequently see people calling out the failure of a small BPL deployment as evidence, but in the last few hours I have reviewed a report on ambient noise measurements in an area for planned BPL deployment in the coming weeks, and the implementor is no small naive power company business development unit. BPL remains a serious threat. Oh, I'm not downplaying it as a threat. It's just one more symptom, though of what has gone wrong in our world. It used to be that "money talk's; bull**** walks" was the adage. Now it's "money bull****s and everyone else is supposed to bow down and kiss its feet." -- Dave Oldridge+ ICQ 1800667 |
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