Broadband Over Power Lines Gains Steam
In Manassas, Virginia, residents and businesses have a third option for broadband Internet access, and it comes at a lower price and without the installation fee and long-term commitment of DSL and cable. What's more, it's delivered over electrical wires, meaning everyone soon will have access to high-speed Internet without availability limitations that plague other technologies.
Source: PC World"We've got a couple hundred users today that are using the BPL [broadband over power line] service, and we've got about 1200 on a waiting list," says John Hewa, assistant director, electric utility, for the city. "We think around the end of the year or the beginning of 2005, we'll have the service available anywhere in the city." In January, Manassas, a city of about 36,000 people, turned an 18-month field trial into a commercial offering. It's one of four utilities--including Cynergy in Cincinnati, Pennsylvania Power & Light, and Central Virginia Coop--that have rolled out commercial BPL this year.
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I think the broadband is sent over the power line and you have a broadband connection point on your plug socket. Then it just runs like a normal broadband connection.
That's what I would suspect. There would be nothing to interpret the traffic if it were coming through your PSU.
Ditto.
Though, I am curious if a surge protector would ruin this whole thing, I suppose it would have to be directly plugged into the wall outlet.
Link
http://www.pcworld.com/news/article/0,aid,116357,00.asp