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#1
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#3
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![]() "N2EY" wrote in message ... http://www.arrl.org/news/stories/2004/12/16/3/ 73 de Jim, N2EY Hello, Jim This may be a hot button for some time to come, but the reality is that BPL is not going to offer the rural areas service any more than DSL. You need a substantial number of subscribers in a given area to make something like broadband "commercially viable". Best regards from Rochester, NY Jim AA2QA |
#4
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![]() This may be a hot button for some time to come, but the reality is that BPL is not going to offer the rural areas service any more than DSL. You need a substantial number of subscribers in a given area to make something like broadband "commercially viable". If you get enough customers in some small rural town to make it pay, thing is that all those customers are going to have to split whatever bandwidth BPL over one set of power wires (the 3 phase around 25KV distribution wires on the poles running into town) all among them. Say a hundred customers downloading mp3s at the same time. Dial up will look better.... |
#5
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In article , "JAMES HAMPTON"
writes: "N2EY" wrote in message ... http://www.arrl.org/news/stories/2004/12/16/3/ 73 de Jim, N2EY Hello, Jim Greetings Jim This may be a hot button for some time to come, but the reality is that BPL is not going to offer the rural areas service any more than DSL. You need a substantial number of subscribers in a given area to make something like broadband "commercially viable". Of course - and that's true of most broadband technologies. But the alleged rural aspect of BPL is one of the selling points, so they're not going to admit it's a puffball. It is my understanding that the main limitation of DSL techniques is the length of copper pair between the customer and the "office". So telcos have been installing copper to fiber transitions out in the field - I believe they are called "extenders". Main limitations are, of course, financial. Meanwhile Ambient names ARRL as the chief opponent of BPL (that's really a compliment, in a way) and claims ARRL is manipulating Earthlink... Surreal. Of course the fact that this administration supports BPL despite the facts should come as no surprise. 73 de Jim, N2EY |
#6
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![]() "N2EY" wrote in message ... In article , "JAMES HAMPTON" writes: "N2EY" wrote in message ... http://www.arrl.org/news/stories/2004/12/16/3/ 73 de Jim, N2EY Hello, Jim Greetings Jim This may be a hot button for some time to come, but the reality is that BPL is not going to offer the rural areas service any more than DSL. You need a substantial number of subscribers in a given area to make something like broadband "commercially viable". Of course - and that's true of most broadband technologies. But the alleged rural aspect of BPL is one of the selling points, so they're not going to admit it's a puffball. It is my understanding that the main limitation of DSL techniques is the length of copper pair between the customer and the "office". So telcos have been installing copper to fiber transitions out in the field - I believe they are called "extenders". Main limitations are, of course, financial. Meanwhile Ambient names ARRL as the chief opponent of BPL (that's really a compliment, in a way) and claims ARRL is manipulating Earthlink... Surreal. Of course the fact that this administration supports BPL despite the facts should come as no surprise. 73 de Jim, N2EY Hello, Jim Heck, if all of the active hams dug deep into their pockets, I doubt we could make a serious ding into Earthlink, let alone the ARRL ... LOL 73 from Rochester, NY Jim AA2QA |
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