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In article , Mike Coslo
writes: Do you have any idea how the rules might be rewritten so that they exempt BPL, but don't apply to every other unlicensed service? BPL isn't an unlicensed service. It's an incidental radiator - under present rules.. Correction noted. It is still regulated under part 15 though, yes? Yes. But as K2ASP notes, there are ways to change the way it is regulated. One simple change that could happen would be to define BPL as a new class of service - perhaps with a "license" of some sort. Or they could do what Phil mentioned. THe act of unlicensed services given carte blanche to interfere with the licensed ones would indicate that they can interfere with other unlicensed services! (Insert standard "not a lawyer" disclaimer here) Who defines what constitutes "harmful interference"? Just wait until some intermod interferes with a baby monitor at the wrong time! Guess Mr and Mrs Smith will be consoled that their neighbor can download his porn via protected BPL. Not a question of intermod. And since the baby monitors have to accept interference today, they'd not be protected anyway. BPL is susceptible to intermod effects is it not? I'm assuming that if it is at different frequencies, that the frequencies can add and subtract just like other RF. Ah, I get it. Yes, that could happen. Besides, it would be a simple matter to notch out a narrow band around 49 MHz for old cordless phones, baby monitors, etc. Except for that intermod problem, which would get to you via the "incidental radiator" Right, but that would be fixable by getting rid of the intermod. This is the opening of a brave new world of wonders! Just imagine once those pesky "regulations" (a swearword in republicanese) go away. Just the next step in "getting the government off your back"... Those cheap Chinese TV's will be a couple bucks cheaper once they can get rid of that stupid RFI shielding. The same for computer monitors. Those sissies that are worried about monitors pooping all over international distress frequencies can go take a hike. The need for another broadband option and the needs of the many far outweigh the needs of a crashed pilot. Hell he or she knew the risks when taking off for that flight. There are people who will argue that point. What amazes me is that there are some people that will agree with it!! 8^O That's what I meant. And yes, there are some. They view RF differently. So many electronic items can be made cheaper by removing those stupid interference regulations, it is a wondrous thing. The free market rulez. Sort of. Consider that for many people today, "radio" below UHF almost doesn't exist. They have broadband internet (wired), cable TV (wired), cell phones (UHF) satellite radio (UHF), maybe a wireless lan (UHF) etc. Heck, conventional NTSC TV is supposed to be replaced by digital HDTV a few years ago, etc. Somewhere along the way, people will discover that *nothing* works anymore tho'. ;^) Nothing *old* works anymore. The solution will be simple: Go buy a new one. (Made guess where). That shouldn't matter. Buy a new unshielded device to replace the old unshielded device. Same problems and more. There really is only so much spectrum to use Point is, if someone isn't using or even aware of the spectrum below, say, 70 MHz, they're not going to be very upset if it gets polluted with BPL noise. Look at the history of consumer electronics since the '70s, Mike. LPs were replaced by CDs. Beta was replaced by VHS which is being replaced by DVD in a bunch of formats. (Remember the big old laserdiscs?) How many generations of computers and various hardware formats have come and gone? Etc. I have to live with the problems caused by that. When you have to archive digital data, the disappearing machine paradigm causes us to have to re-archive, and re-archive and re-archive. Coupled with the fact that CD's are now considered to be extremely non-archival, it's a nightmare, or at least almost a full time job for someone! While old paper books remain readable for centuries. Our Ford would say that the benefits of new technologies outweigh the problems. Would also point to the new industry of retrieving data from old archives. Our Ford had a phrase for it: "ending is better than mending" This isn't anything new. More than 40 years ago, the major car companies knew that, on average,a large part of the new-car-buying public was buying a new car every 2 model years. Their goal was to get it down to every year. Back then the average car lasted about 7-8 years, and it was a rare one to go 100,000 miles, but the manufacturers paradigm was that it was better that way. And now (most) Automobiles cost so much that people have to take out longer and longer term loans. I know people that have 7 year car loans! This new paradigm is near it's endgame also. I note that the local car dealerships are filled to bursting with those 35-40 thousand dollar cars. Part of that is the perception that people "need" a certain type of car. Today, it's SUVs - I can't tell you how many people I know drive SUVs as commuting/general purpose vehicles. They *never* go off a paved surface, and are in 4WD a couple of times a year at most, when we get a bad snowstorm. I think part of what has happened is that as electronics have gotten more reliable, the industry has changed to insure that people will keep buying new stuff. My first CD player lasted almost 20 years, and failed due to mechanical abuse (not by me). Its replacement plays DVDs too. Another example: The latest version of Windows 95 is only about 7 years old, but it is no longer supported by Microsoft. More and more new software won't run on it, so eventually Win95 will simply disappear from most of the few places where it is still used. Which means new computers because the old ones won't run XP, etc. 73 de Jim, N2EY |
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