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Amperion may well be a good partner for someone like DirecTV and its existing installations might be used to trial services such a VoIP, broadband internet, and interactivity with TV programming.

Ever since mid 2005, when Israeli start up WiNetworks revealed that it was in talks with both DirecTV and EchoStar about the provision of key technology to allow WiMAX and a DVB-S signal to co-exist on the same cable, running from a hybrid dual purpose antenna, we have been waiting for the DTH companies in the US and elsewhere in the world to come up with a WiMAX DVB-S Hybrid. But in the absence of a major win in the US, other DTH suppliers around the world have been reticent to be the pioneers in this market.

So if DirecTV takes the power route, it will also hit companies like WiNetworks, as well as operators like Clearwire, as well as denting one of the key bright scenarios for WiMAX generally.

Which is why a throwaway line from Chase Carey is not that at all. He will have mentioned broadband over power line with a very clear intention either to change expectation about the way DirecTV will develop, or to help in current negotiations. Whatever, it will have been very deliberate.

DirecTV is not only in the process of changing ownership from News Corp to Liberty Media, a transaction that still has regulatory and other hurdles to cross, but it has already said it will launch its own VoD service in the US, to run over any broadband line, called DirecTV On-Demand. This will offer thousands of programmes from both broadcast and cable networks, and broadband connection will be integrated into the set top. It would be a lot easier for DirecTV if its marketing for this type of service was run in parallel with marketing for the company's own broadband lines, and also once there is more certainty that the transfer to Liberty is going ahead, so that Liberty too can invest its own content assets into the venture.

In fact, Carey and News Corp owner Rupert Murdoch may have been in disagreement over the best way to proceed in broadband or whether to proceed at all, and it may be the Liberty deal, and the confidence of reporting to a new owner that has given Carey the confidence to speak out on strategy.

Although Satellite DTH operators are the only pay TV market growing in the US (unless you count the fledgling efforts of Verizon and AT&T in IPTV), but the marketing effort of doing so is huge, with churn rates of 1.9 per cent per month, meaning that out of 14 million customers, DirecTV has to find over two million new customers a year just to stand still. It is widely believed that a triple, or even quadruple play, where voice, internet, and perhaps an MVNO offering mobile voice, would reduce this churn to under half of what it is today, saving billions each year in marketing, deployment, and customer premises equipment costs.

Carey is still understood to be considering offering broadband alongside rival EchoStar rather than going it alone and may even develop a multi-tier strategy, over the top broadband in some places, satellite broadband in rural areas, power in some cities, and WiMAX in others.

BPL will almost certainly use the UPA standard based around OFDM over power lines, with thousands of tiny carriers modulated between 2 MHz and 34 MHz on a power line, each delivering part of the overall data. This makes it easy to allocate some of the carriers to one function and some to another, making Quality of Service simpler to put in place.

The implementation of filters to stop overhead power lines radiating signals into the ether, and interfering with other signals such as Ham Radio set ups, should have silenced criticisms of broadband over power lines, but sadly there remains a lobby against the use of power for communications, which so far the FCC has ignored. Liberty Media has also put money into a powerline start up and this might also have been instrumental in Carey's decision to go to a trial.

Copyright © 2007, Faultline

Faultline is published by Rethink Research, a London-based publishing and consulting firm. This weekly newsletter is an assessment of the impact of the week's events in the world of digital media. Faultline is where media meets technology. Subscription details here.

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Latest Comments

Title

BT have or are about to issue a notice on the European journal that states their interest in rolling out fibre to the doorstep to certain selected new build developments. The problem is going to be getting the service providers to change their exchange equipment to deliver internet and telephony services over fibre rather than copper.

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BPL = BAD

Broadband over power lines is an exceedingly stupid idea which should never have been allowed off the drawing board in the first place.

*If* it were implemented, and *if* it actually worked, it would create serious amounts of electromagnetic interference, which would be absolutely inescapable anywhere you went.

Let's just forget about BPL and municipal wireless, and begin bringing fibre-optics to the doorstep (full duplex, 1:1 contention and symmetrical or dynamically-assigned asymmetrical speeds please; some of us want to run servers). And while we are busy digging up the streets, we also should install compressed-air mains in densely-populated residential areas.

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Broadband over Power Line isn't...

...Broadband, or over Power Line.

It tries, but really doesn't deliver. For the price they pay in the connections to medium and high voltage power lines, they could have easily installed simple fiber optic lines, or similar on the same overhead power poles. Why bother with little transmitters and expensive connections to power lines for something that hasn't the bandwidth of 30 or so DSL lines (to serve hundreds of customers). It makes little sense other than political for those who like to have "plug-in internet".

Nice try, but no cigar!

Remember power lines are for power, not the internet.

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