Saturday, April 26, 2008

Power To The (Internet) People

Okay, so banda is a wide accepted standard at the moment, we are all capable of being used to view pages stuffed with large Flash animations, download videos and have, quite decent, video conferences on-line, so that they look a bit like & rsquo; shake animations book " And now?
BPL (Broadband During electricity) is currently going through tests in Hobart, Tasmania (the small triangular, heavily wooded island in the lower right corner of Australia). The option to run the tests here has to be a bit of a stab in the rest of the Australian & 39; s, which can not now, do & 39; back & 39; jokes Tasmanians now because their need, joked about two heads, to read all the information blasted down the Web at speeds of the rest of Australia can only dream of.
Aurora Energy has been developing the network in partnership with Mitsubishi Electric, and is delivered to you via the telecommunications subsidiary of Aurora TasTel. The product is called GLP TasTel.
With reported speeds of up to 240 times faster than a typical dial up service and up to 40 times faster than a 256Kb / sec ADSL connections. The test group are receiving high-speed Internet in banda broad and phone service from virtually anywhere in their homes via power outlets.
At this, the test technology is running at speeds of about 4Mb per / sec, but the future plans are looking to deliver the content on the World Wide Web by an amazing 24 MB / sec. Naturally, it has all the characteristics of the current system of banda large, always on, fees, etc., but no connection with the benefits of using existing cabling that all it takes for granted the house - power supply.
It the other punches to the gut, little Johnny Howard & 39; s, which will soon be superfluous Australian telecommunications giant, Telstra. The emergence and growth of the popularity of VoIP (Voice over Internet Protocol) reached a coup, but still needed to Telstra lines belonging to function.
Looking front, how long is that vai be, before each power line in the country is able to transmit and receive data, wireless, for the next generation of mobile phones?
These new achievable speeds should bring some radical changes in content and quality of sites and online services, as well as ending the aforementioned book and shake & 39; animation " of videoconferencing, but with the acronym already in the VOIP Use - The next big question is - what we call the video over Internet Protocol?



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