A new report by Innovation Observatory, more than $378 billion will be collectively invested in building electricity smart grids by 2030. Sources: Http://Xrl.Us/Bii2sf http://xrl.us/bigqfh

Tuesday, May 30, 2006

Ambient Closes $10 Million Financing to Fuel * BROADBAND over Power Line`s Next Stage of Business Growth


Ambient Corporation, a development stage company and founding member of the Universal Powerline Association (UPA), is a pioneer in the Broadband over Power Lines (BPL) industry. Engaged in the design, development and marketing of patented BPL equipment and technologies, Ambient's proprietary technology and in-depth industry experience is designed to provide optimal solutions for the Utility and Multi-Dwelling Unit (MDU) markets. Headquartered in Newton, MA, Ambient is a publicly traded company (OTC BB: ABTG - News). Visit Ambient at www.ambientcorp.com.


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Tuesday May 30, 9:10 am ET

BOSTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--May 30, 2006--Ambient Corporation (OTCBB: ABTG - News), a leader in Broadband over Power Lines (BPL) solutions, today announced that it has closed a private placement of $10 million in principal amount of its two year 8% Senior Secured Convertible Debentures to institutional and individual investors.

Ambient intends to use the net proceeds of the financing to fund further development of its next generation products, pursue strategic alliances with the utilities that have expressed interest in utilizing Ambient's BPL solutions, further expand its existing BPL deployments as Ambient moves to commercialization and for other working capital purposes. In addition, as part of this funding, the secured bridge loans made earlier this year have been extinguished.

Commenting on the raise, John J. Joyce, President and CEO of Ambient stated, "We are at a tipping point as an industry with many well-known utilities taking a "validate and endorse" approach to BPL. This funding will allow Ambient to continue the migration process to Ambient's proprietary Gen 2 equipment and launch our Network Management System (NMS) marketing strategy. It will also allow us to continue evaluating new opportunities while simultaneously moving ahead with our other deployments."

The 8% Senior Secured Convertible Debentures are secured by a lien on certain of Ambient's property. As part of this transaction, the investors also received Class A and B warrants to purchase shares of Ambient's common stock at $0.20 and $0.25, respectively. Additional information relating to the Senior Secured Convertible Debentures, the warrants and related matters will be included in Ambient's Current Report on Form 8-K that Ambient will file with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

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Ambient Corporation

Monday, May 29, 2006

Raleigh, North Carolina: Sen. Daniel Clodfelter plans to allow broadband Internet access over power lines as an unregulated business.


Plugging in to a new way to surf
Triangle Business Journal - May 26, 2006by Leo John
RALEIGH - Another player might be coming to the Internet field of battle - electricity companies.

State Sen. Daniel Clodfelter, a Mecklenburg County Democrat, plans to introduce legislation that would allow electric utilities to offer broadband Internet access over power lines as an unregulated business.

Both Raleigh-based Progress Energy and Charlotte-based Duke Energy, which is based in Clodfelter's county, have tested the technology, but they want legislation freeing them of regulatory control.

Clodfelter says he'll introduce a bill in 2007 because rules do not allow him to offer such a proposal during the current "short session" of the General Assembly.

Progress Energy, which serves nearly three million customers in the Carolinas and Florida, in 2004 conducted a broadband test with Earthlink, an Internet service provider, that involved the streaming of Internet content into Wake County homes.

That test showed that the technology works, says company spokeswoman Heidi Deja. Progress conducted a market analysis, tried out equipment and delved into marketing the service.

As to whether the Raleigh utility would offer broadband in the future, Deja would only say, "We are still investigating the value of (the) technology."

Duke Energy, which has a service territory that includes about 110,000 customers in Durham County, this summer plans to expand a test program in southeast Charlotte.

The company is being spurred on by its April merger with Cinergy, which operates the most extensive broadband service among U.S. electricity companies with 50,000 customers in and around Cincinnati.

Greg Wolf, who oversees Duke's broadband strategy, told the Charlotte Business Journal that the utility did not have a set timeline for launching the service in the Carolinas.

"But we are on the path," Wolf said. "Ultimately if we implement it across the entire Duke Energy territories ... it will cost hundreds of millions of dollars, but I am confident we can make a business case for it."

Some industry analysts question whether the utilities are too late in coming to the party. Stealing customers away from cable and telephone companies is going to be difficult, they believe.

Duke spokesman Tom Shiel says the Charlotte test run is designed in part to check "if there is a demand" for such a service.

Ben Turner, director of the Electric Division of the Public Staff of the North Carolina Utilities Commission, says such a service could be especially attractive to customers in rural parts of the state. "In some of the rural areas, dial-up is the only thing that is available," says Turner.

Clodfelter says his legislation would be aimed at assuring that a power company's electricity business, which is regulated in terms of costs and other factors, doesn't end up subsidizing a broadband offering.

That may not go far enough for Turner, who contends that the Internet service would be passing through infrastructure paid for by electricity customers. "We would still have some issues with the use of the distribution facility without some kind of contribution," he says.

From: Triangle Business Journal - May 29, 2006

AUSTRALIA: federal Government plans to use a $900 Million fund for Broadband Internet Project !!


Broadband policy makeover
Paul Osborne
MAY 15, 2006

The federal Government plans to use a $900 million fund to entice telcos to roll out several major broadband internet projects in regional and remote Australia.

The government originally envisioned its $878 million Broadband Connect fund would be used to provide per-service incentive payments to providers.
But Communications Minister Helen Coonan has announced the fund, linked to a new blueprint for the sector, would instead be used to subsidise several major broadband projects.

"The remaining underserved areas and black-spots are now more costly and problematic to address and a per-service approach may not provide the necessary scale to enable providers to roll out sustainable infrastructure," Senator Coonan told a telecommunications users group conference.

"It is for these reasons that I consider it is time to take a fresh approach.


"I believe that the best possible use of Broadband Connect is to set aside the majority of the funding to stimulate investment in large scale infrastructure."

She said such a network would extend broadband into regional and rural areas and may include a mix of technologies, including fibre, copper, wireless, broadband over powerlines, and in more remote areas, satellite.

The government will soon invite expressions of interest setting out its likely requirements for project proposals.

"(We) will seek information from the industry about the likely scope and scale of proposals under consideration, both in respect of geographic coverage, as well as the technologies to be deployed and the services to be offered," she said.

"We will be seeking to encourage projects of major scale that would address existing coverage gaps in a sustainable way and help connect this country."

The move came as Austar, Unwired and SP Telemedia Soul, working together as the Ausalliance, proposed last week to roll out a national broadband network using a mix of technologies and subsidised by Broadband Connect.

Senator Coonan said the Ausalliance proposal was a sign the change of policy on Broadband Connect would be welcome by industry.

She said she would meet state and territory technology ministers in September to discuss ways they could contribute.

Any projects would need to ensure the maximum possible coverage, long-term viability and fair and reasonable wholesale access.

"This is a critically important area, because while we do not want to put unreasonable wholesale requirements on successful projects, we do want to enable competitors to have the kind of wholesale access that enables them to value add, offer high quality retail services and give end users real choice," Senator Coonan said.

A tender process would follow in the second half of the year, with the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission playing a part.

The Minister also revealed today she was working on a broadband blueprint to guide the development of next generation networks.

The change of policy and blueprint came as Opposition Leader Kim Beazley last week used his budget reply speech to map out Labor's plan for a national broadband network covering 98 per cent of the population.

Opposition communications spokesman Stephen Conroy said the government had stolen Labor's policy.

"Labor last year called for a national plan to address Australia's future telecommunication needs that included a national joint venture and audit of telecommunication services, including fibre, and a target for broadband rollout," Senator Conroy said.

"Helen Coonan has responded today with a blueprint that adopts almost all of Labor's initiatives.

"We welcome it, but it's no substitute for Beazley's national fibre rollout."

Senator Conroy told the conference Labor's broadband plan would deliver access to broadband of speeds at least 6Mbps to 98 per cent of Australian businesses and homes via a national fibre to the node network.

It would also set up a framework for a competitive, next generation telecommunications network, which would allow upgrades to faster speeds should better technologies come along.

Previous articles: AUSTRALIA: Aurora Energy wants to light 200 Mbps BROADBAND over POWER LINES Technology across Tasmania

Sunday, May 28, 2006

Emergency Services Tap Cellular Technology


Emergency Services Tap Cellular Technology By Laurie Sullivan
TechWeb.com
Fri May 26, 7:18 PM ET



Emergency services from wireless vendors to non-profit groups are increasingly tapping into technology to build alert systems and location-based platforms.

In one example, the Center for Missing and Exploited Children this week launched a program to highlight an emergency service allowing cellular subscribers to sign up online to receive text messages on any cell phone. The organization teamed up with carriers and other groups last year to design the Wireless AMBER Alerts system.

The service, which is slowly gaining traction throughout the nation, offers an instant text message on the subscriber's cellular phone. The free program also works with pagers and PDA, said Bob Hoever, director of special operations for the Center for Missing and Exploited Children on Friday.

"The alert directs the subscriber to immediately call 911 or the police agency investigating the abduction," he said. "When a child is abducted, it's like looking for a needle in a haystack, and the more eyes and ears you have looking for the child, the smaller the haystack."

More than 224,000 emergency 911 calls are made daily from cellular phones, according to the Cellular Telecommunications and Internet Association. The CTIA estimates more than 70 percent of those living in the U.S. have cellular service, accounting for approximately 210 million subscribers.

The goal to create awareness has proved slow going. Although people have registered, Hoever said it's not clear how many subscribers have signed up for the free service. He did say there have been 266 children safely returned to their families since the Amber Alert was introduced in Arlington, Texas, about nine years ago.

Verizon Wireless offered another signal that cellular carriers are providing emergency services. Verizon Wireless on Friday said 911 operators can now locate 95 percent of the customers from their handsets.

Verizon said about one-third of 911 call centers have upgraded their systems and can receive the location information from callers using cellular phones, PDAs, smartphones and other wireless devices.

Wireless phones that are GPS-enabled can help public safety authorities determine the location of a caller, even if the caller doesn't know where they are or is unable to speak. The GPS location technology integrated in the phones makes it possible for the handset to transmit location data automatically to emergency services, helping them to dispatch emergency assistance faster.

The Federal Communications Commission required by the end of 2005 that at least 95 percent of all wireless handsets have the ability to give emergency personnel the location of 911 callers. AT&T Inc.'s Cingular Wireless is using a network-based service to locate callers who dial 911, the company said. Sprint Nextel sought a waiver from the FCC, which has not responded. The company has told the FCC more than 84 percent of its customers had wireless phones capable to identify location.

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BROADBAND over POWER LINES: new 200 Mbps Technology !!!

Friday, May 26, 2006

PHILIPPINES for BROADBAND over POWER LINES: new 200 Mbps Technology !!!


Nextream Phils. taps Telenor to enhance rural broadband lines
Wed May 24, 2006

To further improve its broadband over power lines (BPL) systems to wire the countryside to the world, Nextream Philippines has entered into a joint venture agreement with Telenor Satellite Services to enhance an integrated system that is capable of reaching transmission speeds of up to 200 Mbps over Low and Medium Voltage power lines providing high end technologies such as Voice over IP, Video Streaming similar to Cable TV, and Internet Gateway using the BPL and wireless networking system.


The formal tie-up was sealed the other day at the Makati Shangri La by Nextream Philippines President Ty Javellana who formally signed a memorandum of agreement (MoA) with Telenor Satellite Services represented by its Asia-Pacific Regional Sales Manager Rodolfo Ramirez, Jr.

Nextream is a fast rising technology firm based in Hallandale, Florida whose president and chief executive officer is a Filipino-American from the eminent Javellana clan in Iloilo, Philippines.

On the other hand, Telenor is one of the world’s leading telecommunication firms based in Norway operating for over 30 years of global mobile satellite communications. It is also the largest network of globally positioned teleports with access to multiple satellite networks employing over 20,000 personnel worldwide.

Under the agreement, Telenor shall serve as the main satellite provider for Nextream which recently signed up joint venture and memorandum agreements with 15 electric cooperatives in the three major islands of Luzon, Visayas and Mindanao which over two million consumer base – to promote its BPL system in the rural areas thereby making Internet connectivity faster, easier and better quality. Among the satellite systems used by Telenor include: Inmarsat, Intelsat, Iridium, New Skies, Satmex, Spacecom, Thuraya and several Telenor-owned satellites.

"I am happy to announce that Nextream finally found a partner that would help and support us in our vision to revolutionize the Philippine rural areas through massive education and greater access by ‘wiring them to world through the BPL system," Javellana said.

For his part, Ramirez said Telenor has found a great partner in Nextream which has practically reenergized several electric cooperatives all over the Philippines to make us of their available assets, the electric power lines, to add three other important services in the world such as internet connectivity, telephone and video streaming. He added that integrating Nextream and Telenor technologies will provide wide-range of market reaching even the farthest and most remote places in the Philippines.

Supporting Javellana’s business venture is former National Electrification Administration (NEA) Administrator Pedro Dumol, who serves as Nextream chairman. Dumol is considered as the father of rural electrification in the Philippines. He was largely credited for energizing 90 percent of the rural barrios backed up by the formation of 120 electric cooperatives nationwide. Aside from Dumol, other government officials who expressed their support for Nextream’s BPL system include Presidential Adviser on Rural Electrification Fr. Larry Silva, National Electrification Administration (NEA) administrator Edita Bueno and Cebu Rep. Simeon Kintanar who also serves as house committee chairman on information and education.

Ronald Fesalbon, Nextream technical operations officer, disclosed that the BPL system is the first experience in Asia with the exception of Australia which has gone ahead with its BPL system.

previous article:
BROADBAND over POWER LINES: new 200 Mbps Technology !!!: Philippines: ELECTRIC CO-OPERATIVES are getting serious on rolling out 200 Mbps BROADBAND over Power Lines technology Nationwide !!!

Munis in High-Speed Race

May 24, 2006
Ken Silverstein, EnergyBiz Insider
Editor-in-Chief

When a Chrysler service bureau in Scottsburg, Ind. said that it would move unless affordable broadband Internet access became available, the town's utility there anted up. In doing so, the city was able to prevent 60 auto-related jobs from leaving town.
The case is one of many that the American Public Power Association points to when it says that Congress should do nothing to impede city-owned utilities from getting into or expanding their current high-speed broadband services. The ultimate goal is to provide universal Internet service and not just to those areas that are economically attractive and densely populated. Private companies, in fact, are not required to deploy Internet services to entire communities.

If munis fill the void, they bring with them some risks. The chief concern is whether they would place private firms at competitive disadvantages and whether they would "cross subsidize" any telecom venture with monies earmarked for providing electricity to consumers. That worry has prompted about 12 states to bar municipal utilities from offering any type of telecommunication services. There have also been attempts to do the same at the federal level, albeit they have failed.

It's one thing for municipal utilities to provide Internet services to areas without affordable options. It's another if they compete with the major providers. Congress is addressing the issue now and may include language in a subsequent bill that would give private companies the "right of first refusal" to service a community. In Scottsburg's case, Verizon said it would be unable to create a ubiquitous Internet coverage because the rural area was sparse and made it cost prohibitive.

Public power systems "are fostering a competitive marketplace where consumers are benefiting from the availability of advanced communications services that are the lifeblood of economic development and which can support rich educational and employment opportunities," says the Washington-based public power association, in recent congressional testimony.

Private telecom providers say that public entities could thwart privately-owned competitors who would otherwise employ workers and pay taxes. Clearly, a lot of money could be at stake. The public power association says that of the roughly 2,000 city-owned power companies, about 621 of them offer some type of high-speed access.

And the field will only expand. The Federal Communication Commission reports that during the year 2004, high-speed lines serving residential, small business, larger business, and other subscribers increased by 34 percent, to nearly 38 million lines. The service providers that report to the FCC had at least one high-speed service subscriber in 95 percent of the nation's zip codes, although this says nothing about how much profit may exist in each venue.

Cross Subsidies

According to the Progress & Freedom Foundation, a market-oriented think thank that studies the digital revolution, more and more municipal utilities are providing broadband service because they have already paid off their embedded costs and have the cash on hand to invest. And while it may seem logical to include Internet access as part of a public utility's job, the foundation maintains that it is not.

"This argument fails to convince, however, and particularly in areas where broadband service is already available," says Adam Peters, regulatory counsel. Broadband "networks are private goods, and should be supplied by private entities, with the possible exception of high-cost, rural areas. Private firms have better incentives and are far more accountable to their 'constituency' by holding down costs and making wise investments in technology."

Municipal entrants into communications markets may have several artificial advantages over those in the private sector. Benefits may include tax avoidance and the ability to raise capital through guaranteed tax-exempt bonds, says Peters. And telecom ventures are risky, which means there is a high probability of "cross subsidization" by more profitable divisions of the town's utility. He points to Bristol, Va., Kutztown, Pa. and Ashland, Ore.: All provide internet service where private companies already participate and all were unable to control their costs and required some form of subsidization.

But as the Scottsburg, Ind. example shows, private companies are motivated to enter areas where profit margins are highest whereas municipalities are driven mostly to preserve and expand economic opportunities. And even in crowded urban areas, Internet coverage can be spotty; depending on which side of the digital divide citizens may live.

An opinion piece in the The Dayton Beach News-Journal points to just how critical municipal internet services are to Florida: The Jacksonville muni teamed with a well-known children's clinic to provide special broadband services to allow inner-city and low income sick children to have weekly -- online -- appointments with their doctors. Gainesville Regional Utilities, meantime, built a fiber optic network around the city to accommodate the local hospital and state university there.

The Jackson Energy Authority in Jackson, Tenn., meantime, is now constructing a complex to provide those telecom services to its customers. It expects to have 40 percent penetration of the residential cable market in three years as well as 26 percent and 24 percent of the high-speed and telephone markets, respectively, during that time. The project, which commenced in January 2004 and is expected to take 18 months to complete, is predicted to be cash flow positive in four years time.

"The reality has been that local governments only spend money to build systems when they believe a need exists, and that these local systems encourage private companies to deploy and invest in competitive systems," says the public power association.

State utility regulators must establish rules to help ensure a competitive market. It's a high-wire act in a world where the race to offer high-speed access will only intensify. But, if part of the goal is to bridge the digital divide between the fortunate and less fortunate, then munis must not be excluded from participating.


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BROADBAND over POWER LINES: new 200 Mbps Technology !!!

Wednesday, May 24, 2006

Connected homes: create convenience, security and cost savings

June 2006
Jim Paulson, GE Security general manager, commercial and residential solutions - 6/1/2006

Nearly 44 years ago a futuristic cartoon called ‘The Jetsons’ premiered, featuring a family living in a space-age apartment with a robot to perform housework, a nuclear-powered knitting machine, a video phone on a big-screen television, a voice-operated washing machine and a seeing-eye vacuum cleaner, among other advanced amenities.

Today, the vision of an automated home with centralised, and truly remote, control is a reality. While we may never have a nuclear-powered knitting machine, much of the other technology dreamed up in `The Jetsons' is either here or just around the corner.

Consider these facts: of the starter homes built in the US in 2005, nearly 50% contained structured wiring, meaning they have a network-ready infrastructure - the backbone of the connected home. For move-up homes, that number grows to nearly 60% and for luxury homes, it exceeds 65%. What is more, US households with networks are expected to grow from about 13 million in 2003 to more than 30 million in 2009.

The so-called 'connected home' ties together appliances, heating and airconditioning, computers, security systems, smoke detectors, lighting, home entertainment devices and more, and lets users control them all via remote control from a telephone, cellphone, over the Internet or at home via wall-mounted keypads or touchscreens, or even portable touchscreens that can be carried throughout the house. A connected home allows all the electronics and systems in a home to work together and gives homeowners access to their home from anywhere on the planet.

A connected home can also be an intelligent home, one that is wired to take care of itself and alert you to any problems, rather than the other way around. Improving safety and security is a prime concern in a connected home.

Imagine a situation where there is a fire. An intelligent house can shut off the HVAC unit to avoid feeding the flames with oxygen. It also might shut off certain large appliances in the house, or even main valves such as the natural gas.

Another more subtle application would be to monitor the presence of devices within the home. Homeowners would certainly like to know if their expensive plasma TV was in the process of being stolen. A connected home could easily generate an alarm the instant a television is unplugged, even if the power is turned off. With appliance theft in the home construction market reaching epidemic proportions, such a system would create a high demand among homebuilders.

The benefits to both homeowners and builders of a connected home are practically limitless. With the right wiring, compatible devices and a little imagination, homes can offer everything from remote security and appliance control, energy cost savings, and 'plug-and-play' computer network and home entertainment functionality.

The return on investment can also be substantial. Intelligent lighting, heating and cooling systems can pay for themselves in just a few years. Experts predict that such smart homes will soon be in high demand, and will sell faster than homes without connected technology. What is more, insurance rates may even be reduced with a smart home.


=== more...
HomePlug products expand possibilities

Fastest Internet Ever Coming Your Way


Barry Levine, newsfactor.com
May 24,2006


Someday, we might conquer the vast distances of space and visit the stars. But right now, on this planet, we are on the verge of eliminating distance itself. And the vehicle for eliminating distance is the next generation of the medium you are now using: the Internet.


The current Net has little to impede you as you search for information. If you want to find the exact height of the Eiffel Tower, for example, and also see a small video or a photo of it, you can, within seconds.

But if you want to have a live conversation with someone standing in front of the Eiffel Tower, at night, as if they were on the other side of a clear window -- with the tower shimmering in more realistic detail than you can absorb -- you have two choices. You can either fly there right now, or you can use a PC hooked into the next-generation Internet.

That's right: An Internet that leaves the current Internet in the dust is within reach. Some lucky individuals have already seen the possibilities thanks to the next-gen Net's major research network, a consortium of more than 300 universities, research labs, government agencies, and corporations called Internet2.

read more... INTERNET2


BROADBAND over POWER LINES: new 200 Mbps Technology !!!

Tuesday, May 23, 2006

Inventor of the Web- Berners-Lee calls for Net neutrality

By Jonathan Bennett
Special to CNET News.com

Published: May 23, 2006, 5:46 AM PDT

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BROADBAND over POWER LINES: new 200 Mbps Technology !!!

HomePlug(R) Powerline Alliance Showcases HomePlug AV Technology at Microsoft's WinHEC


SEATTLE--(BUSINESS WIRE)--May 23, 2006--Driving the worldwide acceptance of high-speed networking over power lines, the HomePlug(R) Powerline Alliance today announced that it will showcase HomePlug AV products from HomePlug-member companies at WinHEC in Seattle from May 23 - 25, 2006. The HomePlug AV demonstration will be located at booth #129 in Hall 4F, on level four. The demonstration illustrates how HomePlug AV technology enhances a consumers' digital entertainment experience by enabling whole-house distribution of HDTV and other digital content without the need to run new wires.


"Microsoft sees HomePlug powerline technology as an innovative way of delivering the digital lifestyle experience to consumers," said Scott Manchester, program director at Microsoft. "The HomePlug Alliance is focused on standards and interoperability through certification, which provides users with a simple, yet powerful home networking solution."

The HomePlug exhibit will feature contributions from member companies including Arkados Inc., Aztech Systems, GigaFast, Intellon Corp. and ST&T Corporation. HomePlug member companies including Arkados Inc., Broadcom Corporation, Intel Corporation and Texas Instruments will be exhibiting at the WinHEC conference.

"Microsoft's commitment to the digital home strengthens HomePlug's mission to expand the adoption of high-speed powerline networking technology," said Matthew Theall, president of the HomePlug Powerline Alliance. "The HomePlug Powerline Alliance is helping to drive powerline communications standards, which has been the key element of our success to date."

With millions of HomePlug-enabled products in use on six continents, HomePlug technology is the leading, globally-recognized standard for high-speed powerline networks. The HomePlug Powerline Alliance is the only powerline standards organization ensuring interoperability and compatibility through a strict product certification process that was developed by product manufacturers worldwide.

Companies interested in receiving information about the HomePlug Powerline Alliance are invited to contact Executive Director Rob Ranck (rranck@inventures.com) for details on membership and activities.

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BROADBAND over POWER LINES: new 200 Mbps Technology !!!

UTC BPL Symposium:--- Deployment of Broadband over Power Line Communications --- MAY 21-24,2006, Tampa,FL




The Broadband over Power Line Symposium will focus on the latest on how electric utilities of all sizes can benefit from BPL advances. Regardless of whether you are about to deploy BPL or are just beginning to think about it, this Symposium is a must-attend event.
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Watch the audio-video

an exclusive video interview with Katherine Gomm, Research Manager at the United Telecom Council about the UTC wireless report

India: Project launched to deliver broadband over power lines


Date:23/05/2006

Schneider Electric involved in venture on west coast

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The experiment may help bring down the cost of accessing the Internet
Under the concept, subscribers do not need a phone, cable or satellite connection
A subscriber installs a modem that can be plugged into a wall outlet, and pays a subscription fee
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Bangalore: Global power specialist Schneider Electric has embarked on a pilot project in India to deliver high-speed Internet access or broadband connectivity over power transmission lines to consumers, chairman and chief executive officer of the company Jean-Pascal Tricoire has said.

The "broadband over power line" concept is an emerging alternative to the cable system and DSL (digital subscriber line) for delivering high-speed Internet access to households.

The pilot project is being implemented along with a power transmission company on the west coast. If successful, the experiment will help bring down the cost of accessing the Internet substantially and facilitate use of the technology to more households, Mr. Tricoire said during a recent visit to Bangalore.

Roshanlal Kariholoo, president, Greater India, Schneider Electric, said: "By providing broadband connectivity over power lines, the cost can be reduced by 40 to 50 per cent."

Mr. Tricoire said India was chosen for the pilot project since it was "probably the place" where there were "interesting, daring and technology-driven customers," he added.

Wider reach


Power lines are an attractive broadband delivery system since they are already in place and reach more homes than cable systems or telephone lines.

To make use of the technology, subscribers do not need a phone, cable or satellite connection. A subscriber installs a modem that can be plugged into a wall outlet, and pays a subscription fee.

Along with coaxial cables, telephone lines and the emerging last-mile wireless technology, power lines are becoming conduits for delivering data to homes.

Opening the broadband access market to a new industry with considerable clout could escalate competition to sell connections to households across the country.

Industry sources said the success of the Schneider pilot project to deliver broadband over power line would help facilitate the use of the power network to deliver high-speed Internet access to households, especially those in the hard-to-reach rural areas, where there was a vast untapped market.



BROADBAND over POWER LINES: new 200 Mbps Technology !!!

Saturday, May 20, 2006

MINNESOTA: Rochester Public Utilities to begin BPL testing


RPU to begin BPL testing
Updated: 05-19-2006 09:51:33 PM


Watch Video


(KAAL) -- Rochester Public Utilities will soon begin a trial period to use broadband over power lines (BPL).

The test is to decide whether RPU can add cable television, internet, and telephone capabilities to their service.

If successful, the Utility Board and the Rochester City Council will be asked to approve an agreement with the Hiawatha Broadband Company, and Shpigler Group for deployment.

The service would then be completed in around four years.

Kiplinger Magazine: high-speed Internet service over power lines

Kiplinger Magazine
Outlet to the Net
Friday May 19, 7:25 pm ET
By E.B.


With electric utilities ready to start offering high-speed Internet service over power lines (instead of phone wires), all you will need to get online access is a plug-in modem.
Internet service via power lines should load pages up to five times faster than cable or DSL--and cost you less money. Following tests in Potomac, Md., and Cincinnati, Current Technologies plans to offer the service this fall for $30 to $45 a month; most cable and DSL subscribers pay about $40 to $60 a month.


With no setup fee, the only other investment is $70 to $100 to buy a power-line modem, already available in electronics stores. Just plug the modem into the wall outlet and attach the Ethernet or USB connection to your computer. The service could be available within a year in Georgia, Maryland, New York, Ohio and Pennsylvania.

The power-line concept appeals to service providers because they can easily add equipment to existing wire grids, instead of laying cable into new service areas. Another big fan is Michael Powell, chairman of the Federal Communications Commission, who sees it as a way to increase competition in the broadband market.

Skeptics worry that using power lines for Internet service on a large scale would interfere with other electrical devices, and cause system overload and power failures. But "the rewards are enormous if it works," says Bill Blair of the Electric Power Research Institute.

Even if you don't want Internet service, utilities may use the technology to read your meter remotely, determine if your power is out, and turn off your air conditioner during times of peak usage. --E.B.

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The new 200 Mbps BROADBAND over POWER LINES Technology

Friday, May 19, 2006

BPL TODAY: China's power utility wiring nation for broadband !!!


May 16, 2006

Nearing goal of nationwide 3-second load polling
Nation's smart grid to make US look 'archaic'

BPL will play a role in China's plan to deliver broadband to 21 million homes and businesses in multiple cities (BPL Today, 4/25), confirmed John Heibel of US firm Glen Canyon Partners.

More...

Previous Article:
CHINA: Deployments of Hi-speed Broadband using FIBEROPTIC and STATE ELECTRIC POWER LINES GRID

UPLC Conference at GLOBALCOMM Highlights Growing Global Trend of Broadband over Power Lines


Broadband Power Line 2006
September 17 – 20, 2006
Omni Charlotte, Charlotte, NC
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GLOBALCOMM 2006

ARLINGTON, Va.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--May 18, 2006--The United Power Line Council (UPLC) will host its first-ever co-located Broadband over Power Lines (BPL) conference on Wednesday, June 7 at GLOBALCOMM(TM) at McCormick Place in Chicago in conjunction with the Telecommunications Industry Association (TIA). With power line-based broadband commercially deployed on a wide scale, the UPLC Conference offers a comprehensive program that introduces the technology to the industry; assesses the business opportunity for carriers; and offers insights for broadband's long-term future compared to other technology options.


More and more telecommunications traffic is migrating onto digital broadband platforms, and there is significant consumer demand for affordable broadband access. Because of this, there is a significant opportunity for BPL to become a dominant technology.

"We are excited to carry the message of BPL to carriers looking for last-mile access to business and residential customers in rural, suburban and metro markets," said Bill Moroney, president & CEO of the UPLC. "BPL is beginning to be rolled out commercially, and utilities and BPL companies are interested in wholesale opportunities with carriers, ISPs and video service providers."

"With the FCC phasing out local loop line sharing for competitive DSL services this year, BPL provides an attractive option to competitive carriers," said Matthew J. Flanigan, president of TIA. "At GLOBALCOMM(TM), we've assembled a comprehensive program and expert speakers with first hand experience to debate the potential opportunities and challenges associated with BPL."

Expert panelists will address the business, legal/regulatory, and technical issues for BPL and focus on how BPL can support business goals for companies serving rural or suburban markets, residential or business customers, in limited or wide-scale deployment, to provide voice, video or high-speed Internet access. Some BPL trends that will be discussed include:

-- Technology: BPL is maturing, with chipset speeds of 200 mbps, equipment ramping up to wide scale production and standards development underway

-- Regulatory: The FCC has established rules for BPL's technical operation and is considering classifying it as an information service that would be free from common carrier regulations

-- Business: Now offered on a commercial basis, BPL supports a variety of different applications (including voice) in a variety of different types of markets; and utilities are pursuing a wholesale strategy

GLOBALCOMM(TM), the next-generation communications marketplace and summit, will be held June 4-8, 2006, at Chicago's McCormick Place, with exhibits open from Monday, June 5 through Wednesday, June 7. For TIA, GLOBALCOMM(TM) replaces SUPERCOMM(R) as TIA's annual industry event.


The new 200 Mbps BROADBAND over POWER LINES Technology

Thursday, May 18, 2006

DUKE ENERGY Broadband over Power Lines` website is back online after Duke-Cinergy merger !!!


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Previous website pics:
DUKE ENERGY BPL: Power Lines with Big Brains

AUSTRALIA: Aurora Energy wants to light 200 Mbps BROADBAND over POWER LINES Technology across Tasmania



Aurora wants to light the way with BPL
Dahna McConnachie

18/05/2006 13:18:33

Ultra fast Internet is set to race through power lines across Tasmania, with Auroa Energy also seeking to push its Broadband over Powerline (BPL) business model to utilities across the country.

TasTel, a subsidiary of Aurora Energy, has been commercially trialling BPL since September last year. The service is so far delivering up to 200Mbps speeds to 1200 homes in Hobart and Burnie.

Aurora business development manager, Bob Darwin, said that Aurora is set to announce wholesale plans under the brand name of eAurora and dive into a full scale state-wide commercial rollout within the next two months.

He also intended to spread the word to the mainland.

"We are not saying that we will fly a plane over the country and spray fairy dust so that all of a sudden the whole country is BPL enabled, but we believe our model is a good way to deliver an alternative last-mile service and it is an important part of the telecommunications mix," he said.

"We want as many people as possible to get into this market as we think it is a great solution and we want to get cost of supply down, but we can't do that on our own."

Darwin said he has been very pleased with the uptake and response to the trial so far.

"The day after the launch we had about 1400 people sign up expressions of interest on our Web site. Unfortunately a lot of those people were out of state so we had to tell them we couldn't quite stretch our wires that far," he said.

"We've also had a lot of interest from utility companies in every other state and territory, as well as from New Zealand, Indonesia and Fiji. So our belief is that if we build the business model, others will follow."

By partnering with Aurora, Darwin said, ISPs and retailers would have increased opportunity to sell to other utilities.

"Utilities are interesting because they are very difficult to sell into. They are much more comfortable leveraging information across the industry, so we are trying to get as much information (about BPL) out there as possible.

One of the challenges Aurora faces along with any company operating in regional Australia, he said, is that only 40 percent of Tasmanians have PCs with Internet access.

"We are looking at a variety of ways to enter the market (as BPL offers services that have no need for a computer or PC). One of these is just simply through offering cheap IP phone calls without the need for a PC, but we are also assessing a couple of local partners to help us deliver IP TV," he said.

BPL will have an increasingly important role to play in the future digital home as vendors like Mitsubishi increasingly put BPL chips into various household appliances and equipment for remote management, according to Darwin.

Related articles:

AUSTRALIA: Broadband over Power Lines trial nears commercialisation despite interference claims

"Unless a boat sailed under the power lines there won't be interference."

AUSTRALIA: Silk Telecom slips into powerline broadband
By Renai LeMay, ZDNet Australia
10 March 2006 01:05 PM

Wednesday, May 17, 2006

Paying too much for a slow broadband upload speed ?

Compare Broadband BPL vs. Fiber-to-the-homes pricing and Upload speed !!!



Current Broadband BPL offering for 3-5mbps same upload/download speed

VS.

CNET: Beware of broadband speed overkill !!!

CLYDE, Ohio - City Council voted to expand its high-speed Internet program via Power Lines !!!

Article published Wednesday, May 17, 2006

Clyde boosts high-speed Internet program


CLYDE, Ohio - City Council voted 5-0 last night to expand its pilot program to develop high-speed Internet service by piggybacking on power lines.

Broadband-over-power-line service offers consumers another choice to obtain Internet service anywhere they have an electric outlet.

BPL competes with cable, DSL telephone service, and wireless for high-speed Internet access.

And by the end of the year, between 300 and 500 Clyde residents are expected to have access to that technology.

Council voted on a resolution to hire a pair of New York state firms - Sojitz Corp. of America, of New York City, and Shpigler Group, of Nyack, N.Y. - to design and provide technical support for Clyde's venture into high-speed Internet connections.

City Manager Daniel Weaver says a pilot test has gone well enough to roll out a full-scale system.

Clyde, with a population of 6,064, is about 40 miles southeast of Toledo.

The city expects to spend $750,000 on the system, and its initial customer sign-up is anticipated to be fewer than 10 percent of the 2,600 households, Mr. Weaver said.

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The new 200 Mbps BROADBAND over POWER LINES Technology

Tuesday, May 16, 2006

Philippines: ELECTRIC CO-OPERATIVES are getting serious on rolling out 200 Mbps BROADBAND over Power Lines technology Nationwide !!!




Power co-ops agree to bring Internet to the countryside
Wednesday, May 17, 2006


Nextream president Ty Javellana (right) firms up the agreement with the electric cooperatives led by Francisco Diza of Tarlac Electric Co-op , with Nextream's Earl Burrows and Pedro Dumol as witnesses.
...


CAGAYAN DE ORO CITY—A fast-rising technology corporation based in Hallandale, Florida has clinched six joint venture agreements and eight memoranda of agreement with electric cooperatives in Luzon, Visayas and Mindanao for the use of “broadband over power lines” system that will connect rural folk to a wide-range of education, connectivity and information through the use of Internet, telephone, on-demand cable TV right in their households.

The formal signing was held at the Grand Caprice Convention Center last May 10 coinciding with the electric cooperatives’ national conference on power distribution, management reforms and recognition. The four-day event was attended by Albay 3rd District Rep. and House committee Chairman on appropriations Joey Salceda, former Finance secretary now Institute of Corporate Directors chairman Jesus Estanislao, presidential adviser on rural electrification Fr. Larry Silva, National Electrification Administration administrator Edita Bueno, and former National Electrification chief now Nextream chairman Gen. Pedro Dumol who joined more than 700 co-op officers from all over the country.

Signing the joint venture and memoranda of agreement were Nextream president and chief executive officer Ty Javellana who was assisted by the firm’s chief finance officer Gary Cedeño, chief technical officer Ronald Fesalbon and advisor Earl Burrows.

Among the eight electric cooperatives represented by its respective president and general manager which signed the agreements with Nextream were: Cagayan I Electric Cooperative with president Lope Mallillim and general manager Tito Lingan; Ilocos Norte Electric Co-op with president Lorenzo Rey Ruiz and general manager Romillas Pascual; Misamis Oriental Electric Co-op with president Pedrito Baculio and general manager Julie Real; Bohol I Electric Co-op with president Jeremias Boligao and general manager Carlos Itable; Tarlac I Electric Co-op with president Francisco Diza and general manager Resurrecion Coronel; Tarlac II Electric Co-op with president Orlando Masibay and general manager Amelia Tioaquen; Lanao Norte Electric Co-op with president Gregorio Tan and general manager Resnol Torres and Davao Sur Electric Co-op with president, Artemio Tajon and general manager Jesus dela Victoria. Last February, Nextream signed a joint venture agreement with the Peninsula Electric Cooperative general manager Loreto Marcelino for its maiden broadband over power lines venture that is expected to wire 120,000 consumers in the next five years.

Among the six electric cooperatives represented by its respective president and general manager which signed the joint venture with Nextream were: Cagayan II Electric Co-op with president Benjamin AF Agatep and general manager Gabriel Tordesillas; Central Pangasinan Electric Co-op with president Arturo Magalong and general manager Ma. Josefina Manlapat; Negros Occidental Electric Co-op with president John Peter Millan and general manager Lamberto Canlas; Cebu I Electric Co-op with president Mariano Blanco Jr. and general manager Edecio Satina and Cebu II Electric Co-op with president Rhett Minguez and general manager Edecio Satina; Cebu III Electric Co-op with president Tereso Lebumfacil.

“Nextream has developed an integrated system that is capable of reaching transmission speeds of up to 200 Mbps over low and medium voltage power lines, thus rivaling metropolitan and access networks with the chance for the service providers to extent their value proposal to customers offering them voice, video and data services—what is known as “3 Play services” over the same infrastructure,” Javellana said.

Nextream will be providing high- end technologies such as voice over Internet protocol, video streaming similar to cable TV and Internet gateway by the use of broadband over power lines and wireless networking.

Dumol, considered as the father of rural electrification in the Philippines after having served as National Electrification administrator from 1970 to 1986, expressed optimism over Nextream’s ‘viable and affordable system’ that will give information technology access even to the poor rural folk using electric power lines.

Dumol was credited for energizing 90 percent of the rural barangays backed up by the formation of 120 electric cooperatives nationwide.

Nextream’s tie-up with the electric co-ops will address the great digital divide in our society and will fast-track the Internet connectivity in the rural areas. In a brief meeting with Nextream officials, Salceda cited the disparity in the use of cellphones which now account for 36 million subscribers compared to 16 million households connected to landline phones. Salceda, considered as one of the most influential economic advisers of the incumbent President, disclosed that the administration will soon declare massive Internet connectivity as an urgent national policy.



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fyi: Philippines to rollout of BROADBAND Internet over ELECTRIC POWER LINES Nationwide !!!!

===
The new 200 Mbps BROADBAND over POWER LINES Technology

Flashback: WebTalk Radio interview re: BPL prior to the FCC Approval of the Technology


Plug-in Internet: Power line broadband has arrived


By Dana Greenlee, co-host WebTalk Radio 3/13/04
(please forward to 23 min. area)
====


The new 200 Mbps BROADBAND over POWER LINES Technology

Internet-Connected Appliances Could Lower Energy Bills

Pilot test in Washington and Oregon lets dryers and water heaters check electricity prices and decide if its worth waiting until off-peak times.

By Keyla Kirton
InformationWeek

May 15, 2006 12:00 AM

Larry Brous' clothes dryer drives a hard bargain. Every five minutes, it checks the current electricity price over the Internet. If the price is above the threshold Brous set, the dryer doesn't run. Save the clothes for later--and don't get soaked.

Brous is one of 200 people in Washington and Oregon taking part in an experiment that uses real-time pricing data to let people make smarter choices about energy use. It's a tiny project with the potential to significantly change electricity markets at a time when energy is back on top of public policy concerns.

Dryers and Water Heaters
The GridWise Initiative, led by the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, is testing dryers, thermostats, and water heaters that are wirelessly connected to a server, which uses a broadband connection to fetch prices. Homeowners also can set monthly energy budgets and monitor in real time whether they're sticking to them. In another experiment, 50 dryers are equipped with a chip that will respond to instability on the power grid and shut off the heating units on the dryers for a few minutes. Spread across millions of homes, this program could provide a shock absorber in the grid, giving producers the few minutes needed at times of peak demand to bring new power online.

The project takes a market approach to trying to lower power consumption--or shift it to off-peak times. That could let utilities put off building new power plants, says Don Hammerstrom, Pacific Northwest National Lab's project manager.

Whirlpool and IBM modified Kenmore dryers and water heaters so they can connect to the Internet and use the data collected from the Net. IBM also customized the middleware that enables the interaction. "This has never been done live," says Ron Ambrosio, an IBM manager on the project.

Blackout Memories
GridWise is funded by money Congress set aside to prevent blackouts and brownouts, which often are caused by overloads during peak power periods.

On Aug. 14, 2003, the largest blackout in North American history left 50 million people in eight U.S. states and Ontario without power. Most people are back to taking the power grid for granted, but that showed how strained the network can get. Rising energy prices also have conservation efforts back in style.

The idea of price-based power use could have some appeal within data centers as well, for batch processing jobs that consume a lot of electricity but aren't time sensitive.

Brous and his wife, however, are focusing on their water heater, programming it to be off after 8 a.m. and in the afternoons, avoiding peak power price times. "I'm saving 15% off my electric bill every month," Brous says.

Internet-connected appliances have been discussed for years, but they've never seemed very useful. The GridWise project suddenly makes connecting your dryer to the Web sound sensible.




The new 200 Mbps BROADBAND over POWER LINES Technology

LISBON, PORTUGAL: ONI Selects Actelis Networks Carrier Ethernet Over Copper Solution to Deliver Voice and Data Services Over Electrical Power Lines


Actelis Network Equipment Enable Innovative Use of Existing Electrical Facilities

LISBON, PORTUGAL -- (MARKET WIRE) -- 05/16/2006 -- Service Providers and Network Operators are looking at innovative ways to extend the reach of their Metro Ethernet services to reach more subscribers and satisfy the demand for next generation telecom applications. ONI, Portugal's leading alternative fixed line operator, is deploying Actelis Networks' Carrier Ethernet over Copper™ access platforms to deliver high-quality, high-bandwidth Ethernet using ONI's PLC (Power Line Communication) equipment which deliver services over the electrical infrastructure to subscribers throughout Portugal. Actelis is the world-leading provider of Carrier Ethernet over Copper access platforms that encompass a wide range of networking solutions.

ONI has deployed Actelis systems to extend Ethernet over Copper to remote PLC equipment not reachable by fiber. The Actelis platform supports a point-to-multipoint network that is used to backhaul PLC equipment. This network delivers a 10 Megabit Ethernet connection that can be used to support both telephony services and Internet access.

According to ONI, "The Actelis platform achieves excellent performance in terms of bandwidth, range, and reliability. The system provides fiber-like resiliency and performance, is very simple to configure, as well as fast and easy to deploy. The Actelis platform over power lines will allow mass adoption of broadband services for all people of Portugal."

"Actelis Networks is pleased to have joined with ONI of Portugal to provide Ethernet over copper services using existing copper infrastructure," said Ronen Peleg, Vice President of EMEA Sales for Actelis Networks. "Increasing demand for high-bandwidth services outside fiber networks requires new approaches to solve this problem. Actelis' Ethernet over copper platforms converts the copper network into a broadband network with a fiber-quality transport solution that offers same day deployment and fast return on investment for service providers."

Actelis' award-winning product portfolio enables system integrators, service providers, and private network operators to use the existing copper infrastructure to provide premium long-reach voice, video and data services quickly and universally. Available in point-to-point or point-to-multipoint configurations, Actelis' Ethernet-over-Copper platforms deliver up to 45 Mbps of symmetrical, high-quality Ethernet services to customers or locations over the existing copper plant. Designed to comply with the IEEE 802.3ah Ethernet in the First Mile (EFM) standard, and powered by Actelis' patented EFMplus™ technology, the Actelis' platforms provide far better rate, reach and reliability than other Ethernet-over-Copper solutions. With the ability to provide high-quality bandwidth to distances beyond 10 km, Actelis' platforms are ideal to support a wide range of broadband applications including transparent LAN services, LAN interconnection, and voice and video over IP.


The new 200 Mbps BROADBAND over POWER LINES Technology

View the BROADBAND over POWER LINES Technology company - Ambient Corporation`s Form 10QSB Quarterly Report



SEC Filings for ABTG.OB > Form 10QSB on 15-May-2006

Monday, May 15, 2006

MSNBC: in San Antonio,Texas- Five telecom providers eying market expansion, one a Broadband over Power Line provider !!


"Current will kick off their Texas operations in North Texas through an agreement with Dallas-based TXU Corp. The service will be offered to more than 2 million customers."

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Five telecom providers eying expansion into S.A. market
By Catherine Dominguez
San Antonio Business Journal
Updated: 8:00 p.m. ET May 14, 2006

San Antonio area residents and businesses will soon have more choices when it comes to telephone and data services.

Four companies have applied for operating certificates with the Public Utility Commission (PUC) of Texas to provide services ranging from basic telephone service to Internet services. A fifth company has applied to extend its existing services from the Houston area across the state.

The companies include Fort Worth-based Talk Now Telco; Chicago-based Access One Inc; Germantown, Md.-based Current Communications of Texas LP; and Kirkland, Wash.-based Clearwire Telecommunications Services LLC.

Houston-based Connect I.T. has asked the state to amend its operating certificate to expand services statewide, including the San Antonio area.

Troy Guillett, CEO of Connect I.T., confirms his company will expand into the Alamo City but he did not have a set timeline.

Connect I.T. was originally approved to provide basic telephone service in Texas in April 2004. That service includes long-distance and international calling in the Houston area. The company also offers pre-paid calling services.

Access One, Connect I.T. and Talk Now Telco will provide services through re-sale agreements with major telecom carriers in areas of the state currently served by AT&T Texas, Verizon Communications and Sprint.

The field
Talk Now Telco, a newly formed business, will also offer basic telephone service including local and long distance to residential and business customers. Talk Now will provide pre-paid local, domestic long-distance and international long-distance service.

According to the company's application with the PUC, Brandon Young, owner and president of Talk Now, was a part owner of Fort Worth-based Get A Phone, which continues to provide telecommunication services in Texas, California and Florida. Young sold his interest in the company more than two years ago.

Access One will provide basic telephone service, local and long-distance, wireless and DSL Internet services. The company was founded in 1993 and is recognized as a "Complaint Free" telecommunications provider by the Better Business Bureau.

Clearwire was founded in 2003 and is a facilities-based provider of wireless, portable, high-speed broadband Internet services through a wireless modem. The company has a large presence on the West Coast but is expanding into other markets, including Texas.

According to Teresa Fausti-Blatt, spokesperson for Clearwire, the company recently announced a marketing partnership with America Online (AOL). Through the agreement, the companies will offered AOL High Speed Internet powered by Clearwire.

Electric option
Current Communications, a subsidiary of Maryland-based Current Communications Group, was founded in 2000 and offers broadband over power lines (BPL), which is high-performance broadband Internet services provided over existing electric power lines and in-home electric wiring.

By using a small device plugged into an electrical outlet, customers can connect a cable from their computer to the device to access the Internet.

In fact, Current announced May 4 that the company had secured $130 million from new and existing investors to accelerate the deployment of BPL-enabled "Smart Grid" electric utility networks.

Melissa Kresse, spokesperson for Current, explains that the Smart Grid is a tool developed by Current that electric companies can attach to their systems to help manage and control the network for the BPL.

Current will kick off their Texas operations in North Texas through an agreement with Dallas-based TXU Corp. The service will be offered to more than 2 million customers.


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The new 200 Mbps BROADBAND over POWER LINES Technology

Sunday, May 14, 2006

Putting South Africa’s power lines to good use: Broadband Communications ~30 Mbps access speed !!!



15 May 2006
Putting South Africa’s power lines to good use

Since the company’s inception in 2004, Goal Technology Solutions (GTS) has striven to develop a cost-effective and reliable means of getting broadband internet into and around the home and the office.

Over the past few years, the wireless internet industry has also made various attempts to accomplish this, but reliability in the required bandwith has not yet managed to satisfy users’ requirements.

However, Engineering News can today report that Sandton-based GTS believes to have solved this problem by offering what CEO Adrian Maguire labels power-line communication, or PLC.

“PLC’s development has reached the stage where it has become extremely viable,” Maguire cites.

“It now offers highly affordable and high- quality broadband connections.” GTS specialises in delivering broadband services over power lines, including high-speed internet and VoIP, and Maguire boasts that the company has excelled in solving what he dubs broadband internet’s ‘last mile riddle’.

He points out that the problem has always been that although there are ample fibre cables and large networks all around us, most locations do not have access to them as the cables are not allowed to interfere with infrastructure such as roads.

“The only two organisations that have fixed access to South African homes without having to traverse roads with cables are Telkom and Eskom,” he points out.

“Even the long-awaited second network oper- ator will have to use Telkom’s infrastructure.” And, he adds, current legislation limits the use of wireless connections like WiFi and WiMax to very small areas.

Further, Maguire emphasises that the need for development in this field is strongly driven by the monopolisation of South Africa’s fixed-line communication market.

Thus, GTS realised that ingenious innovation would be required to solve this conundrum, which resulted in the company’s creating a PLC solution that utilises municipalities’ electricity grids to deliver broadband internet services.

Maguire argues that the reason for VoIP’s not being as widely accepted as it should be is that there is a vast shortage of reliable bandwith.

But he states that PLC is still in its infant stages and GTS is currently educating the industry about PLC and its advantages.

“Because of the vast capabilities of providing broadband over power line, the African continent has shown immense interest,” he enthuses. “We have signed a contract with Uganda Telecoms to be the coutry’s broadband-access provider through PLC, and we are installing our system at a hotel in Rwanda and have a representative in Zambia.” GTS has reportedly based its entire network on IP, and as VoIP and other services inevitably improve, the network will be able to support them.

The possibilities that PLC affords are incred- ible, including high-speed Internet, high-resolution picture sharing and video streaming, VoIP and security cameras – all this currently avail- able from GTS.

He stresses that GTS has been closely monitoring the international market and has managed to maintain pace with European and American companies.

“The test phase of the product is now complete and it has entered mass production,” Maguire says.

GTS’s PLC solution is also substantially cheaper than other systems that offer broadband internet. “Fibre cables cost up to 60% more than our system, and don’t offer the same flexibility,” he says.

Harnessing the hidden power of our electricity grid Maguire recounts that power-line communication has been around for many years – since the 1960’s in fact – only, before, it was mainly used for telemetry purposes (the sending of signals to test whether the circuit is open or closed).

Between 1980 and 2000 scientists realised that power lines could be used for true communication, but in 2000 VoIP was still new, and there was scepticism as to whether it offers an effective communication solution.

“VoIP drove many of PLC’s developments from 2000 to 2003,” he notes.

“This was because narrowband internet limited the quality and reliability of VoIP, but in 2003 a completely new technology was developed – a 45-megabit first-generation system that offered quality and reliability for voice communication.

When GTS deployed its first system in 2003, the pricing was steep, but Maguire reports that the company introduced its second generation system in 2005, which had an improved bandwidth of up to 200 megabits, and the price of the system had been drastically decreased.

It was developed with a strong focus on VoIP and GTS began producing CPE modems that have VoIP integrated codecs, which can convert an analogue phone into a VoIP phone, connect it with the PLC network and establish communication with a remote location within less than twenty milliseconds.

When the systems head-end unit is connected to the electrical power grid, it turns the grid into a local area network or a wireless area network.

The company offers two types of CPE modems: one that processes ordinary data as well as VoIP data, and another that just processes data.

All GTS’s services are IP-based, so it does not limit anyone that is connected to the network.

Maguire emphasises that the PLC system does not only offer VoIP services, however. Also at customers fingertips are services including video phones, video streaming, data sharing, real interactive TV, security and monitoring, network gaming and high-speed internet – all with the flexibility of wireless and the reli- ability of wireline.

And Maguire enthuses that this can be done anywhere that an electrical socket is available.

He says that this technological breakthrough will allow the GTS to service a variety of locations, including hotels, office blocks and, ultimately, entire cities.

All this is possible through building a full broadband network over PLC.

Through this network, the company can also offer telemetry services such as utility meter reading.

Maguire adds that a further benefit to PLC is that GTS replaces numerous voice and data cables with a single electrical plug point.

This helps to alleviate the inevitable confusion incurred by companies that wish to upgrade networks to VoIP “They simply install the relevant software and plug in the CPE modem,” he states.

The system has already been tested by Rooi-wal, a small community north of Pretoria, where GTS supplied 130 houses with CPE modems and guarenteed each household a bandwidth of four to six megabits, but actualy delivered bandwidths closer to 30 megabits.

“The households also enjoy free community voice calls,” Maguire reports. “And external VoIP calls plus high-speed internet are offered at extremely competitive rates.” He explains that customers have the option of either hiring the equipment from GTS and paying for the amount of bandwith they use, or buying the equipment for a once-off fee.

“We are looking to reduce telephony costs by a minimum of 25%, but this can increase to 50% in some cases,” Maguire asserts. “And we are not only focusing on cost reduction, but are also improving service quality.” He clarifies that free community calls are limited by legislation and are dependant on whether they are made within a public or private domain. The fastest uptake of GTS’s technology has been found in town-house estates and golf estates. Maguire explains that customers will not be liable to pay for the use of electrical infrastructure, as agreements will be reached between the owners of the relevant power lines and GTS.

He also assures Engineering News that the system is lightning protected by an Opto coupling designed for electrical networks, which, he says, can also be used on low and medium voltage.

The company expects to be servicing some 5 000 clients by the end of the year, and therafter expects exponential year-on-year growth.

GTS started out as a division of Grintek, but was bought out in 2004 to become an independent company.



fyi:
South Africa: An uncapped 3 – 10 Mbps Broadband over Power Lines with 3 commercial pilots in the Eastern suburbs of Tshwane.

High-bandwidth, fast internet upload/download speed is now a MUST !!!



High-Definition Video Could Choke Internet
By PETER SVENSSON,
AP Technology Writer
Sunday, May 14,2006


Every day, it seems, a new service pops up offering to send you video over the Internet. "Desperate Housewives," Stephen Colbert heckling the president, clips of bad dancers at wedding parties: It's all there.

You may be up for it, but is the Internet?

The answer from the major Internet service providers, the telephone and cable companies, is "no." Small clips are fine, but TV-quality and especially high-definition programming could make the Internet choke.

Most home Internet use is in brief bursts — an e-mail here, a Web page there. If people start watching streaming video like they watch TV — for hours at a time — that puts a strain on the Internet that it wasn't designed for, ISPs say, and beefing up the Internet's capacity to prevent that will be expensive.

To offset that cost, ISPs want to start charging content providers to ensure delivery of large video files, for example.

Internet activists and consumer groups are vehemently against those plans, saying they amount to tilting the Internet's level playing field, one of the things that encourages innovation. They want legislation to guarantee a "neutral" Internet, but prospects appear slim.

At the heart of the debate is a key question: How much would it really cost the Internet carriers to provide a couple of hours of prime-time TV over their networks every day?

The carriers are playing their cards fairly close to their chest, but there are ways to get close to an answer.

One data point: As a rough estimate, an always-on, 1 megabit-per-second tap into the Internet backbone in downtown Atlanta, bought wholesale, costs an ISP $10 to $20 a month, according to the research firm TeleGeography Inc. An ISP's business is carrying data from that tap to the customer.

One megabit per second doesn't sound like that much, but ISPs spread that bandwidth out over their subscribers. Analysts estimate that ISPs sell around 30 times more bandwidth to their end users than they can connect simultaneously to the Internet (the figure probably varies widely from provider to provider).

In this sense, broadband is like old-fashioned telephone service, where there are always more lines leading from homes to the local switching station than there are going from the station out of the neighborhood. If everyone in a neighborhood picks up the phone at once, some calls won't go through because there aren't enough outgoing lines. But that rarely happens, so the system works.

On the broadband network, the oversubscription means that one megabit-per-second connection to the Internet is enough to serve 40 DSL accounts, each at a maximum speed of 768 kilobits per second, typical for low-end DSL. So the cost of providing data to each DSL is about 25 cents to 50 cents a month per customer.

Of course, the carrier also needs to pay for the equipment that brings data from the Internet connection point to the subscriber, first through fiber-optic lines and then through DSL or cable.

Oversubscription doesn't present a problem as long as people are using the Internet for Web surfing, e-mail and the occasional file download. But if everyone in a neighborhood is trying to download the evening news at the same time, it's not going to work.

"The plain truth is that today's access and backbone networks simply do not have the capacity to deliver all that customers expect," according to Tom Tauke, Verizon Communications Inc.'s top lobbyist.

The solution, of course, is to make the pipes connecting to the Internet fatter. To illustrate what that would mean, BellSouth Corp.'s chief architect, Henry Kafka, uses the assumption that the cost of providing a month's worth of data to the average user, about 2 gigabytes, costs the company $1. That's a fairly small amount compared to the $25 to $47 a month BellSouth charges for DSL, but then the company has to pay for sales, support, maintenance and a host of other costs.

If that same user were to start downloading five TV-quality movies per month, BellSouth's data cost, not including the cost of maintaining the DSL line, would go up to $4.50 a month. Higher, but perhaps not high enough to break BellSouth's business model.

But if the customer starts watching Internet TV like the average household watches regular TV, 8 hours a day, BellSouth's cost would go up to $112 a month, according to Kafka.

"We don't expect to get to the point where we're charging anyone those kinds of prices for Internet service, but it does reflect the kind of impact that high-quality video could have on the network and business models for providing the Internet," Kafka said.

To deal with that, Kafka said says BellSouth might put caps on the amount of data that a residential user gets for free, and charge extra if the user goes over, much like cell phone users pay overages. Other options include charging content providers extra for guaranteed delivery, the kind of model that has raised the hackles of Internet content providers and activists.

However, Kafka's estimates for these costs aren't really BellSouth's. Like other telephone companies, they don't disclose their actual costs. Instead, Kafka's base figure of $1 for 2 gigabytes of data per month is based on an estimate by Dave Burstein, editor of the DSL Prime newsletter, and Burstein thinks Kafka has it wrong.

"Traffic just isn't moving up that fast," Burstein said. "It will go up and it will go up faster, but not fast enough to be dollars and cents that really matter."

Internet video is still just a small fraction of the total amount of video people watch, and that's unlikely to change overnight, in Burstein's opinion.

In fact, he said, Internet traffic has increased much more slowly than the prices of Internet-carrying equipment like switches and routers have fallen, and that trend is likely to continue.

Burstein believes the danger of letting the carriers charge extra for guaranteed delivery is that they'll put the spending for upgrades into creating that extra "toll lane," and won't reduce oversubscription in the rest of the network even though it would be cheap to do so.

Both Verizon and AT&T Inc. have said they won't degrade or block anyone's Internet traffic. But it's impossible to tell what goes on inside their networks.

The message: Stay tuned, and watch your download speeds.

===
The new 200 Mbps BROADBAND over POWER LINES Technology

Saturday, May 13, 2006

New York: Spitzer calls for affordable broadband Internet statewide


5/12/2006, 4:54 p.m. ET
By MICHAEL GORMLEY
The Associated Press

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"New York lags behind other states and the rest of the world in high-speed affordable broadband access," Spitzer told business and government leaders at Broome Community College near Binghamton. "There is simply no excuse for this digital divide," according to a copy of the speech. "We must make New York state the most connected and technologically advanced place to live and do business in the world."

He said the high-speed Internet services will boost business, education and medical care even in the most rural areas of the state.
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fyi: April 2006
Published by AMRA
New York Lawmakers Discuss AMR Pilot Program

A BROADBAND over POWER LINES or PLC Technology retailer opens online store: POWERLINEshop.COM !!!

Friday, May 12, 2006

ARRL Shifts Congressional BPL Focus to US Senate

NEWINGTON, CT, May 12, 2006

fyi:
DS2 200 Mbps BPL technology is working with ARRL Laboratory to work out BROADBAND OVER POWER LINES Interference Issues !!!!

BROADBAND over POWER LINES: New player in high-speed Internet game

Thursday, May 11, 2006

New player in high-speed Internet game

Listen to this story

Millions of Americans connect to the Internet with high-speed connections from their phone or cable company. But now electricity companies are starting to get into the mix with Broadband over Power Lines or BPL. From Pittsburgh, Mark Nootbaar reports.


TEXT OF STORY:

MARK AUSTIN THOMAS: Millions of Americans connect to the information superhighway with high-speed Internet connections from their phone or cable company. But now, electricity companies are starting to get into the mix with Broadband over Power Lines or BPL. Mark Nootbaar has the story.



MARK NOOTBAR: Power companies can send high-speed Internet communications over copper wires that run through every neighborhood in America making ubiquitous high-speed Internet a possibility. But at what price?
Sam Spencer is editor of the newsletter BPL Today. He says the industry could be at a tipping point.


SAM SPENCER: "I think this year we're going to see that the technology is finally reaching a point where it is affordable enough that a utility can actually really make the argument that it's worth rolling out."
By purchasing the right equipment power companies can quickly offer Internet service to millions of new customers. There are several pilot projects being launched in the US, including one in the Pittsburgh suburb of Monroeville. That service is being offered by Duquesne Broadband -- a spinout of the local power company.

Company president Mark Rupnik says a utility can be ready to offer BPL in a short period of time and at a third of the equipment costs of DSL service.


MARK RUPNIK: "The electrical infrastructure exists. Our equipment just connects to that infrastructure in a non-intrusive way. We use what are called couplers to couple to the power lines very easy and very quick to expand utilization of the network."
But to make BPL work the local power company has to create a "Smart Grid" by adding Internet style communications equipment to the power lines. That allows the utility to monitor power transmission equipment, remotely read meters and maybe someday talk to your appliances.

Sam Spencer says without a smart grid BPL does not work -- especially in rural areas.


SAM SPENCER: "For those deployments utilities are looking for the grid applications. And then if someone else can come in and make a business case for delivering broadband service to those customers then we'll have connectivity that way."
Texas has a law that prevents power companies from charging customers for infrastructure that will only benefit BPL customers. Other states have similar laws pending. Spencer says where pilot programs are working it has driven down the cost of other high-speed offerings, but that has not yet been the case in Pittsburgh. The local power company hopes to some day roll out BPL service to all of its 585,000 customers. Thorn King of Duquesne communications says he sees high-speed Internet access as part of everyday life.


THORN KING: "With the opportunity to have voice over IP so you can get your telephone service across the Internet as well as video services over the Internet. More and more people will be using Internet service as the primary communication service from their home."
The BPL project in Pittsburgh uses wireless technology which means eventually customers will be able to roam about the community without losing access. Public safety officials are eyeing such city-wide networks as a way to keep officers connected.

In Pittsburgh, I'm Mark Nootbaar for Marketplace

http://marketplace.publicradio.org

Thursday, May 11, 2006

Telkonet's MST Launches First Bundled Package of Voice, Video, Internet and WiFi Services on New York City's Roosevelt Island


Thursday May 11, 10:35 am ET
MST Launches First ''Quadruple Play'' Services in a New Residential Development at The Octagon On Roosevelt Island


GERMANTOWN, Md.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--May 11, 2006--Telkonet, Inc. (Amex:TKO - News) -- All tenants of The Octagon, a newly opened 500-unit luxury residential complex on New York's Roosevelt Island, are moving in with free access to 21 Century technology, provided by the developer, Becker + Becker Associates. Microwave Satellite Technologies, Inc, (MST), a subsidiary of Telkonet Inc., has created and installed a communications system for The Octagon that allows all residents to enjoy a comprehensive bundle of services, including Internet, Cable, Voice and WiFi services - all from one provider.


The building's architect and developer, Bruce Becker, President of Becker + Becker Associates, is offering each of the 500 rental units free broadband access at every electrical outlet in the building, as well as cable TV, VoIP and WiFi services. The Octagon also boasts two fourteen-story wings, 30,000 square feet of lobby area, and amenities that include six tennis courts, on-site childcare, and a 22,000 square foot fitness center.

more...
The new 200 Mbps BROADBAND over POWER LINES Technology

The New York Times:

Putting the Wire Back Into Networking !!!
May 11, 2006

Tuesday, May 09, 2006

BPLTODAY.COM updates on BROADBAND over Power Lines this week !!!

South Africa: An uncapped 3 – 10 Mbps Broadband over Power Lines with 3 commercial pilots in the Eastern suburbs of Tshwane.


True broadband, courtesy of your municipality
By MyADSL, 8 May 2006


An uncapped 3 – 10 Mbps Broadband offering for around R 300-00 per month will sound like an April Fools joke to many South Africans, but this service will soon become a reality.


This offering is the result of a partnership between the City of Tshwane (CTMM) and Goal Technology Solutions (GTS).

CTMM and GTS are about to launch a commercial Broadband over Power Lines (BPL) pilot where some residents will get access to an uncapped broadband service of between 3 and 10 Mbps for a monthly cost of around R 300-00 per month.

Charles Kuun, Manager of the Tshwane Global Digital Hub Program, said that he expects this pilot project to be up and running within the next three months. This trial will kick off with 3 commercial pilots in the Eastern suburbs of Tshwane.

BPL technology, with a theoretical throughput of 200 Mbps, will be used as a last mile access technology while Tshwane’s well established fiber network will serve as the backhaul network.

Kuun, the driver behind this world class municipal broadband network development, is very optimistic about the prospects of this offering. He informed MyADSL that their BPL trial in the Rooiwal community in the North of Tshwane has been a great success, and a commercial trial was therefore the logical next step.

The Rooiwal trial not only brought Internet and telephony services to users, but was also used for other services like electricity metering and IP cameras. Users in this community enjoy fast Internet access, typically 4 Mbps, used for purposes ranging from gaming to online education.

The new commercial municipal BPL service in the East will be far superior to any other commercial broadband service available today. Vodacom and MTN’s HSDPA service can deliver maximum speeds of up to 1.8 Mbps while Telkom’s superior ADSL offering has a maximum speed of 1 Mbps.

With speeds of between 3 and 10 Mbps for around R 300-00 per month Tshwane is making good on their promise of being community and user centric rather than opting for the operator centric approach we so often see in the broadband arena.




The new 200 Mbps BROADBAND over POWER LINES Technology

Sunday, May 07, 2006

Philippines to rollout of BROADBAND Internet over ELECTRIC POWER LINES Nationwide !!!!


With a handshake. NEA administrator Edita Bueno and Nextream president Tyrone Javellana firm up their alliance in the presence of Gen. (ret.) Pedro Dumol (left) and officials of NEA and Nextream.
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Venture formed to spark ‘rural revolution’
By Donna G. Brazas
Monday, May 08, 2006

After 35 years of providing rural electrification to 33,500 barangays, the National Electrification Administration has formed an alliance with Nextream Broadband Philippines, a fast rising US-based technology firm, to launch what is probably the second revolution in the countryside - wiring rural folks to the Internet.

The alliance was firmed up after NEA administrator Edita Bueno and Nextream president and chief executive officer Tyrone Javellana signed the deed of donation for five sets of brand new computers to NEA coinciding with the inaugural switch-on of Nextream’s Broadband-Over-Power-Lines technology. The signing ceremony and turnover of computers was witnessed by former NEA administrator, now Nextream chairman, Gen. (ret.) Pedro Dumol, Francis Nacienceno, president of the Rural Electrification Association Cooperatives and NEA officials.

“After energizing 98 percent of the barangays with only 2,500 out of the 36,000 not yet energized by NEA, it’s but proper to join forces with Nextream in its avowed mission to stage a second wave of revolution in the rural areas which is to wire them to the global village using Nextream’s broadband over power lines technology,” Bueno said after formally accepting the computer donations.

Bueno lauded Javellana for his patriotism in giving back something in return to his native land as well as Dumol, whom she considered as a second father and a great mentor, for his continuing effort to serve the country by starting the first revolution of bringing out from darkness and bringing electricity to millions of households in the rural areas and for the successful formation of 120 electric cooperatives all over the Philippines. “It is to the credit of Gen. Dumol that he is venturing into another pioneering BPL project, probably the first in Asia, which will dramatically help in educating the people as well as providing equal access to technology and information at an affordable price.” The NEA chief vowed to endorse to other electric cooperatives possible joint ventures with Nextream.

For his part, Javellana underscored the social relevance of connecting the countryside to the rest of the world by empowering them with a powerful tool of education and access to information.

“It’s always nice to be home. This project will surely ignite a second revolution after our partners—the electric cooperatives have literally brought out from darkness the rural folks but only this time—it will be the illumination of the mind,” Javellana said. He promised to provide more computers to NEA in the coming months.

For his part, Dumol saluted the NEA officials for “performing beyond expectations” and for continuing the noble mission of providing electricity to the rural households in provinces where only 2,500 barangays are not yet energized.

Dumol likened the BPL technology to a three-in-one instant coffee wherein the end-user can have access to the internet, cable tv and telephone at a very affordable price using the Nextream modem and wired to the regular main outlets of homes. He said that BPL technology does not need any satellite or expensive cable wires to be connected to the Internet but only through the electric power lines.

Nextream finance chief Gary Cedeno stressed the benefits of the BPL technology in terms of creating jobs for the people.

While the race for wireless Internet technology goes on among the major telecom companies, Nextream is unfazed by the stiff competition.

Nextream sales and marketing manager John Yu expressed optimism that more electric cooperatives, once they find out that broadband technology works wonders, will join forces with Nextream Broadband Philippines.
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read more: BROADBAND over POWER LINES: new 200 Mbps Technology !!!: Philippines: Cable TV via Broadband over Power Lines (BPL) Access