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Wes Stewart wrote:
If they can't read my meter remotely how in the hell are they going to supply me with high-speed data transmission? BTW, I've strongly suggested that they don't try. I've done the same with our cooperative here. Personally, I think attempts to fight BPL through the political system are a waste of time. The amateur radio community doesn't have the financial resources to outbid the utilities for legislation. What *will* stop BPL is economics. Many of the expenses of offering broadband communications are independent of transmission technology. Obtaining a backbone connection, providing mail & web servers, customer support & billing are all expenses that are the same whether you're providing BPL, DSL, or cable modem service. BPL has the additional disadvantage of requiring well-trained personnel with expensive safety gear to maintain the infrastructure. Most cable and DSL maintenance can be done on the ground. BPL is at an advantage ONLY in very rural places, too small for cable and too far from the CO for DSL. Such places don't have enough customers to pay for the fixed infrastructure. IMHO a few utilities will try full-scale rollouts of BPL - and will find it doesn't sell enough to pay the expenses. It'll go the way of the picturephone. ============= If that doesn't work, we can tell the freeband community what's wiping out 26-29MHz, and post a few photos of the BPL access equipment, and then be sure to not get anywhere near a power pole without a bulletproof vestgrin... -- Doug Smith W9WI Pleasant View (Nashville), TN EM66 http://www.w9wi.com |
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