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Electric Lines and Gas Pipes To Carry Internet To Princeton Illinois
On 26 Nov 2005 12:48:03 -0800, policy-ham wrote:
"I'm much more active on the Interent now because the speed is much better than with dial-up," said Leslie Lund, who began using BPL in March. "I don't get interference, even when my husband uses his power tools." Fire up a full-power 1500W RTTY transmitter on 80 meters next door and see if she can make the same statement..... -- 73 de K2ASP - Phil Kane |
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Electric Lines and Gas Pipes To Carry Internet To Princeton Illinois
At that distance you don't even need a 100 watts to elimate their interent
completely. The old saying if it causes interference it can be interfered with. I had a leaky cable company amp on the power in front of my rural house. And every time I keyed up on 2 meters everyone up and down the street lost their cable. And they did hear me clear as a bell too, turned out there wasn't anything any government agency would do ecept tell the complainers to call their cable provider. They had it fixed in hours after that. They have no protection from interference on a closed system and had they interferred with my 2 meter station they would have had to shut it down immediately as they are not to interfere outside of their system period. My neightbour had one of those internal broadband system for distributing interent with in his house over the power lines. I caused him so much grief and it turned out the units where not legal in Canada or the USA. Turned out they were a cheap Chinese copy of a system that was approved but operated in near the 2.4 ghz on a very low level hardwired system. He called to file a complaint and the Industry Canada (Canada's form of the FCC) they wanted the number off the sticker on the back of it and then paid him a visit a couple of days later. I knew the inspectro so he stopped over for a visit and a coffee and told me all about what had happened. It pays to have friends in the right places, hi, hi. I don't think this BPL is going to make it as the technology is not yet prefected to the point where they will not cause interference on very broad spectrul of the hf, vhf and uhf bands. Motorola has the means and the technology but their system works up in the giga hertz where the bandwidth can be used without interferrring with hardly anything or anyone. Why do you think it's been outlawed in Japan and Austrailia, specially Japan the most advance electronics country in the world. do you honestly think it will last in North Amercia in either country. Do you remember how much of the radio frequency spectrum is assigned to the military, well do you think they will tolerate any kind of interference at all? Not likely and they will make darn sure you don't have the ability to in the future as well. And then there are the other countries of the globe, it is written that no country shall willingly or unwillingly cause interference with the radio service of another country. Also there is the hf radio broadcast spectrum that is very much a part of the 40 meter band, do you really think they will tolerate interference. It's the bottom line, if the USA and Canada adopt the idea that we can interfere with anyone else, I wonder how long our exportable products will be sold in those countries. Without exports where will our economies go, who's going to be able to afford to pay for an ISP who caused you to loose your job. Sorry about the long windedness, but this is going to disappear, for one do you really think the airline industry will put up with an ISP interfering with their comunications, not likely. And that's just one example, there are the police, fire and ambulance, the FBI, CIA, RCMP, FAA the list could go on and on. Before long those that choose to turn it on will have it shut off more than it's on. And then it becomes a black hole for the investors. If they can put internet 100 miles outside of Anchorage Alaska, or on Elsmer Island, which is 300 miles south of the North Pole where there are no hydro poles or wires, they can put it anywhere without interfering with anyone. I'm gone EasyRider "Phil Kane" wrote in message ast.net... On 26 Nov 2005 12:48:03 -0800, policy-ham wrote: "I'm much more active on the Interent now because the speed is much better than with dial-up," said Leslie Lund, who began using BPL in March. "I don't get interference, even when my husband uses his power tools." Fire up a full-power 1500W RTTY transmitter on 80 meters next door and see if she can make the same statement..... -- 73 de K2ASP - Phil Kane |
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