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Re: OT: Wireless Internet
- Subject: Re: OT: Wireless Internet
- From: "Andy Turnbull" andyt@xxxxxxxx
- Date: Wed, 2 Jul 2008 07:36:40 -0400
I have TV cable internet in Toronto, and I thought that was more-or-less
standard anywhere. I'm not sure about power-line internet, because of the
transformers.
They used to sell phone intercom systems that worked over the power lines,
but as I recall the signal would not go through a transformer.
My sister in law, who livers in the country, fought for years to get high
speed internet. She finally settled for a satellite link.
andy turnbull
----- Original Message -----
From: "flash"
To:
Sent: Wednesday, July 02, 2008 12:19 AM
Subject: Re: OT: Wireless Internet
≪In rural communities, I'd like to see high-speed Internet
delivered over the power lines. Plug some sort of modem into an
electric wall outlet, and you're online.≫
Indeed, there is no technical reason why you have to go online via the
telephone jack. It is just that telephone companies have sold us on the
idea that that's the way to go. You can just as well get your Internet
link via the tv cable-antenna (if you have one) or electric power lines.
The only requirement is that, at the other end of the line, there is a
router (or some sort of proxy server) with Internet access. The power
line link was tried in some European countries, but, I think, they had
trouble filtering out noise.
Many large cities are now providing metropolitan Ethernet (MetroNet) to
the doorstep. I'm not sure how they get passed the distance limitations
of Ethernet, which, even with fiber optic cable in full duplex mode, are
shorter than the diameter of a large city.
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