Plug In For
Speed -- Make room, cable and DSL
High-speed Internet service via power
lines is becoming a reality
Jan 2, 2006 - Informationweek
Author(s): J. Nicholas Hoover
Imagine getting your high-speed Internet service through an
electrical outlet on your wall. Tens of thousands of Americans already
have that option, and potentially millions will have it within the next
few years.
Small trials using power lines to deliver broadband Internet access
have popped up around the country, serving consumers who don't have
access to cable or a telephone line for DSL (such as the growing number
of people who use cell phones instead of conventional phone service).
Power companies, partnering with Internet providers, last month began
servicing residents in suburban Pittsburgh and small swaths of Michigan.
A broadband power-line provider called Current Communications Group LLC
just cinched a $150 million, 10- year deal with TXU Electric Delivery to
deliver service to as many as 2 million Texans.
An investment team made up of Google, Goldman Sachs Group, and
Liberty Associated Partners raised an estimated $100 million for Current
earlier this year.
The big IT companies are involved, too. Cisco Systems' Linksys
division makes broadband power-line modems, IBM has partnered with a
Houston utility company to develop services, and Internet service
provider EarthLink plans small trials of the service next year. Research
firm Telecom Trends International predicts that broadband power-line
revenue could reach $4.4 billion by 2011, up from 2004's $57.1 million.
Current Communications sells service up to 3 Mbps, hoping to
eventually increase to 25 Mbps. The company plans "triple-play" services
and will launch voice-over-IP services via power lines in Cincinnati in
February and branch into video in coming years, Current VP Jay Birnbaum
says. "This technology in the course of the next five or 10 years is
going to be able to compete on par with cable, DSL, and the other guys,"
Birnbaum says.
Lingering issues could muddy things for providers. Amateur-radio
operators, a particularly vocal force, have long argued power-line
broadband interferes with radio signals, and new FCC rules require
broadband power-line systems to be able to filter frequencies where
interference occurs and shut down remotely to resolve interference.
Also, electric noise on the wires can degrade IP signals, but providers
say new technologies are helping them better control that problem. -J.
NICHOLAS HOOVER (nhoover@cmp.com)
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