Internet users in Germany will soon have a shockingly innovative way to access the Net
Published:
7 April 2001 y., Saturday
Internet users in Germany will soon have a shockingly innovative way to access the Net, when RWE Powerline rolls out Internet services over a small part of its power grid in July.
The technology is called Power Line Communications (PLC), and it could change the way many people get online. RWE Powerline is a subsidiary of RWE, Germany's largest electricity provider.
Right now we're the only company in the world doing this," said RWE Powerline spokesman Andreas Preuss. Passing data over electric wires is a relatively old idea, and many electric companies have already been using their networks to send data within their grids. Basically, data is transferred over high-tension wires just like electricity and then is stepped down and passed through a special transformer located at the local power substations.
Each transformer will be able to serve up to 200 households. From substation, data is conducted through low-tension wires into each home. A specially designed modem then interprets the data in a similar way to conventional modems. The modems, developed RWE's partner in the project, Swiss Ascom, can then be plugged into any electric socket in the house.
If RWE's program proves successful, the telephone companies -- which have been painfully slow in rolling out DSL across the continent -- could very well have some stiff competition on their hands.
Users will have to purchase a special modem for about $160 –- roughly the same price of a DSL modem -- and then pay a $23 monthly rate that will allow them to transfer 250 megabytes. Additional data transfer will cost 6 cents per megabyte.
Šaltinis:
wired.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Software company announced new structure_ of it_s business.
more »
Sonic Duo, the Russian subsidiary of Finland's Sonera, has received a Russian Communications Ministry operator's license for GSM-900/1800 standard cellular services in Moscow and the surrounding region.
more »
Just when it seemed safe to get back in the water a new virus is making life difficult for users of Microsoft Corp.'s Outlook e-mail program.
more »
search.lt presents newest links
more »
Mac users can finally stop feeling like second-class citizens if they're users of the world's most popular online provider.
more »
Professor Lawrence Lessig of Harvard University warned that in the move to broadband technologies, "we are at the beginning of a war" .
more »
Mac users can spread the "NewLove" worm via e-mail, however, and it can infect Macs running Windows emulation products.
more »
Justice and 19 states defend Microsoft breakup proposal in legal brief.
more »
AltaVista Wednesday unveiled Raging Search, a new search engine through which the portal will attempt to lure "high-end" Net veterans to its service.
more »
Chief executive Steve Jobs is expected to offer new details about Apple's forthcoming operating system, the OS X, when he kicks off Apple's annual developer forum Monday.
more »
search.lt presents newest links
more »