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Telephone Wire Cable Alternative

dlkf writes "CNN reports that Hartwell, Georgia is the test site for a new technology developed at the Georgia Tech Research Institute used to transmit TV signals over the phone line. With the addition of a set top box, users get 60 channels along with their DSL and phone line."

154 comments

  1. Lack of technical info by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    All right, 60 channels, DSL and phone. Can they give an estimate on the number of raw bits/sec they get through a phone line? Then we can figure if we can really access 60 channels simultaneously, or if channels really come one at a time on demand, etc.

  2. Re:Cable and DSL and Phone services oh my! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2
    RCN too. I live in the Boston area, and get my telephone, cable TV, and broadband ISP through RCN. In the town I live in, I can chose between Verizon (nee Bell Atlantic, nee Nynex) for telephone and DSL, and MediaOne and RCN for telephone/cable TV/cable modem. That's three providers of local telephone service: my "local telephone area" is the entire state of Massachusetts except for the area code in the far west end of the state. The long distance rate is so cheap it's not even worth bothering to look at those internet telephone solutions, given that I don't use long distance much anyway.

    This is the kind of choice and competition that deregulation was supposed to bring; too bad that it is taking so long for the new infrastructure to be rolled out in most parts of the country. But this new tech should help speed things up: perhaps the existing DSL providers could expand into TV service as well, and really stir things up. Can't wait: more competition means more choice and lower prices.

  3. hah.. by Mike+Hicks · · Score: 2

    ...So I can wait even longer to get cable installed, eh? The cable guy already missed his three-hour window for installation today...
    --

  4. Forget Verizon, Use Speakeasy by Tim+Macinta · · Score: 1
    Although quite how far into the realms of fantasy I am I'm not sure...

    You're obviously pretty deep in fantasy - you left out a lot of features that are in Verizon DSL that are sure to make they're way into the TV service:

    • We'll send you the wrong type of DSL modem and then charge you 6(!) times for it at over $100 a pop.
    • We'll refuse to take back the original modem because it is no longer supported and we'll take over half a year to refund the erroneous 5 charges.
    • When your line goes down and you call up for tech support we will keep you on hold for several hours so that you think you're at the front of the queue, but then drop the phone connection so that you don't get to talk to anybody. We will do this often.
    • We will promise to look into your line problems within 72 hours, but actually take 2 months.
    • We will waste several cummulative days of your life in hold time on the phone waiting for tech support.
    • When you do get ahold of tech support, they won't know what you are saying when you tell them that packets are being dropped on your connection.
    • We'll continue to bill you for the service until almost half a year after you cancel. Also, we'll bill you through our telephone service so that your telephone bill becomes delinquent if you refuse to pay.

    All of the above unfortunately happened to me when I had BellAtlantic/Verizon DSL (in addition to the previously mentioned tendancy for the service to not work). I wish I were being sarcastic, but I'm not. I hope this TV service isn't being run by any baby bell, because I hear they're all pretty bad.

    I have since switched to speakeasy.net for DSL service and the difference is just phenomenal. The one time I thought my service was actually out I called up their tech support to report the problem. Once the tech support guy and I had traced the problem to my Linux NAT box he offered to transfer me to a level 2 technician to help diagnose the problem in my box! This is such a massive difference from Verizon where I would have to pretend I was using Windows when I called up and where their level 2 tech support was always just as useless as their level 1 tech support. I recommend Speakeasy every chance I get so that they grow strong and prosper so that I can use their service for years to come.

  5. Re:Information Age Barriers by Don+Negro · · Score: 2
    Sadly, all you have to do here is follow the dollar.

    DSL was invented at Bell Labs in the '80s, and promptly put on the shelf because they saw no practical application for the technology. And difficult as it is to imagine, they were right.

    Why? Because when there are very few home PCs (compared to today) and those PCs don't store or push a whole lot of information, then you won't have people willing to pay for fat pipes. When most of your information is text, an 80MB hard drive is an unspeakable luxury for a desktop box, and a 14.4 modem will do just fine. If you have a lot of people who want to connect to you simultaneously, and you can afford it, ISDN was available, and didn't have the 12,000 foot line limit.

    Now, we have a need, and that need is being filled. I wish I lived in a world in which technology was available because it ought to be rather than because people would pay to satisfy a need.

    As for me, I like my DSL just fine, and had it transfering packets within two weeks of my order. (Not that SBC actually sent me the necessary software or anything, but there are ways around that for the resourceful...)

    Don Negro

    --

    Don Negro
    Perl 6 will give you the big knob. -- Larry Wall

  6. Re:Ma Bell by Drel · · Score: 1

    I've heard nothing but bad comments about
    AT&T's cable modem service. I use Qwest
    DSL (the business package). Aside from
    the tremendous expense (close to $100 a
    month for 640K DSL, 5 static IPs and
    domain hosting), I've been very happy with
    the service. I wish I could get service
    for closer to $50 for 1 static IP (hello,
    NAT!) and the above.

  7. Re:Movin' on up to a monopoly? by kidlinux · · Score: 1

    Actually, with digital cable you can get upwards of 500 channels.

    --
    -kidlinux.
  8. Re:why waste bandwidth on 60 tv channels???? by stripes · · Score: 2
    IIRC, DirecTv or The Dish Network don't allow you to hook up more than 4 TVs per dish

    DISH has a switch, I think the SW64 that can be used to hook up 6 recievers to the two dish's (two LNB's per dish, one dish per satalite, or the DISH500 which is actually two dishes, four LNBs...).

    Or you can skip four recievers, and hook up another SW64 and six recievers to the second SW64...or another SW64 and....

    That was a bit over a year and a half ago. There was talk about a bigger multi-switch. A house two doors down has this setup and a lot of recievers for it's local population (I only have one reciever).

    The real problem is each dish gets an even and odd polairity signal, and can feed out one but not both. The reciever asks for whichever one has the channel it needs. There are two LNBs on some of the recievers so it can can serve two recievers. A switch can take in both LNBs, and set on to even and one to odd forever, and give the recievers whichever they ask for.

    That is then compounded by having more then one satalite. DISH does this by having either two dish'es, and a switch, or one slightly eliptical dish that gets both signals and acts as the switch as well. I beleve that DirecTv does the same thing, but I'm not sure.

    The external multi-switches are a bit of a kludge, but they work. I don't know if DirecTv has them.

    P.S. I think the mPhase stuff doesn't send 60 video channels down the phone line, just one selected channel (or two or so). The limit of 60 is probbably in the head end, and not that hard to change. But that is a total total total guess. It would work that way if I had to design around the current constraints... :-)

  9. Re:hmmm. by stripes · · Score: 2
    IDSL may be "better" in terms of how far from the central office it can go, but it's typically not "better" in terms of how much bandwidth you can get - it's just running, as I understand it, a raw bit stream over an ISDN line, i.e., instead of splitting a basic rate 144K bits/second ISDN line into 2 64K bits/second B channels and 1 16K bits/second D channel, they just give you one 144K bits/second channel (or maybe you only get 128K bits/second).

    You do get the 144Kbits/sec. Around here it is even a fair bit cheeper then ISDN.

    It may be VDSL (others in this thread have spoken of VDSL in this context), which is higher speed than typical ADSL.

    Never heard of it, but that doesn't mean anything. There are more xDSLs then you can shake a stick at. I know there is an HDSL which is 1.5Mbps/sec both ways, and an SDSL that I think is symetric, but no specific speed, and quite a few others. There is also a lot of variation in supported speeds and distances depending on the equiptment at each end.

    Sometimes you can get a faster speed from one provider or the other even though they all use the same wires from the RBOC.

  10. Re:hmmm. by Guy+Harris · · Score: 2
    The must be using a better DSL than the standard ADSL the most providers use. Maybe the ISDN DSL (IDSL or what ever it's called).

    IDSL may be "better" in terms of how far from the central office it can go, but it's typically not "better" in terms of how much bandwidth you can get - it's just running, as I understand it, a raw bit stream over an ISDN line, i.e., instead of splitting a basic rate 144K bits/second ISDN line into 2 64K bits/second B channels and 1 16K bits/second D channel, they just give you one 144K bits/second channel (or maybe you only get 128K bits/second). ADSL often goes up to 384K bits/second to the subscriber, or better, and 128K bits/second from the subscriber (my service is "at least" 384K/128K, but my downloads are typically around 1.1Mb/sec).

    It may be VDSL (others in this thread have spoken of VDSL in this context), which is higher speed than typical ADSL.

  11. Is there anyone here by roystgnr · · Score: 2

    ...who would prefer 58 more channels of broadcast crap (I'm acknowledging two good channels for the Simpsons and Babylon 5 reruns to be generous) to the tens (or hundreds, with anything but the best digital compression) of megabits/second of data bandwidth that those channels require? If there's enough unused capacity in a DSL connection to piggyback 60 full motion video channels, how come anyone not next door to the telco gets told they can't be guaranteed more than a couple hundred kbps?

  12. Re:Movin' on up to a monopoly? by Chris+Hiner · · Score: 1

    Here in the U.S. (specifically metropolitan Southern California), you pay an extra $5 for the extra channels, and then (if available) an extra $5 for the digital tier (which, if you have premium channels, greatly increases the number of available channels).
    Lets see, here in SE Michigan, in wonderful TimeWarner cable land:
    Standard cable: $33.57 (plus taxes)
    Plus $9.50 for 2 premium channels, or $19.95/8
    Or $10.95-$34.95 (Plus the $33.57 for standard) for various digital cable packages...

    Standard includes 71 channels (counting 2 shopping, and 11 public access/messageboards)

    And for (coming soon for the last 2 years!) Cable modem: $39.95

    If only I was in one of the cities around here where Ameritech is a competitive cable supplier...

  13. You don't want it over HFC by Dr.Whiz-Bang · · Score: 1

    The latency sucks rocks - bandwidth is nice, but channel changes? nope.

    McAllister place is probably to far from the DSLAM or something. When higher badwidth becomes practical (like alcatel's new DSL stuff) then this won't happen.

    gg

    --

    gg
    Dr.Whiz-Bang
    1. Re:You don't want it over HFC by jmcneill · · Score: 1

      I don't know where you get this bullshit, but 2.7ms to NBTel's NAT (and 8.3ms from there to their next router) is NOT bad.

  14. Re:Does it mean... by unitron · · Score: 1

    If I'd expected this I would have saved one of my mod points to mark this as funny.

    --

    I see even classic Slashdot is now pretty much unusable on dial up anymore.

  15. Re:I've got a way of upping the number of channels by Jeffrey+Baker · · Score: 2

    God DAMN you are FUCKING BRILLIANT. Read the article and note that this is exactly what they are ALREADY DOING. There might still be time for you to GET A PATENT, though.

  16. Why.... by Lumpy · · Score: 1

    Let's see... Use a switched network instead of a boradcast network.... that makes your equipment needs HUGE! Let alone let's look at the fact that 98% of america's phone lines are of crap quality (sub cat-2) and hellishly old. The phone company doesnt replace a trunk run unless they have to (there are trunk lines in michigan that are still in use and are almost 100 years old!) Cable is much younger therefore the infrastructure can handle changes quicker. Heck AT&T over the past 5 years tore down all calbe and replaced it with fibre here... Ameritech? they still use the infrastructure that was installed 50 years ago. they dont want to replace it, they cant replace it, and the scary part is that 30% of it is unknown-undocumented!

    Phone companies trying to get on the bandwidth wagon... it will never happen, the phone companies will die as other companies (cable, sattelite,mind transfer...whatever) come in with infrastructure that isn't based on 200 year old telegraph wires.

    (PS the phone company should have done their upgrades 20 years ago instead of sitting on their butts.)

    --
    Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    1. Re:Why.... by Lumpy · · Score: 1

      That's funny. My father has a warehouse that used to be a large manufacturing plant for military parts here in michigan, I located a phone closet in the center of the wearhouse with old phone equipment and it had 5 144-pair trunk lines coming into it. one day while bored I started to look around the lines with a butt set and discovered 60 operating phone lines. when I notified my father he called the phone company and they, after research, concluded that I was wrong and that did not exist. So.. I investigated further. lines from trunk1 to trunk3 were "jumpered" and when I would sever a jumper a phone conversation I was listining to would be disconnected. After 6 months of talking to them I finally grabbed a phone guy in his truck and led him to the closet where he called back and there WAS NO DOCUMENTATION of the lines that were there, and why the trunks in that building were being used.

      I also have several friends in the telcom business. they all agree that this is very normal, and undocumented items/fixes/wires are very normal. (one is a infrastructure manager, and is suprised monthly with technicians calling on things that dont exist)

      So yeah... I "think" I know from the solid background I have and information I have access to.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
  17. Re:Movin' on up to a monopoly? by qnonsense · · Score: 1
    I agree wholeheartedly with your post. One nitpick though.
      • 4) 95% (at least) of all municipalities that have cable available for residents have a long term contract in place. To switch to a telco for this would require some nifty sidestepping of issues.

      I don't know anyone who has a long-term cable contract. It's always monthly.
    Right, you don't know anyone. It's the municipalities themselves. That's why you (US residents, b/c that's who the original post seemed to be aimed at) can't choose cable providers. Their CITY (or county or whatever) contracts on a long term to lock them to a single provider.
    • The point? Don't bash the technology because the people who are initially using it arn't the nicest people in the world. If this makes it into my city before cable broadband access does, I'll sign up for it.
    Right on.
    --
    There comes a time in every man's life when he must say, "No mother! I do not want any more Jell-O!"
  18. Re:Yeah, make one monopoly compete another monopol by HeghmoH · · Score: 1

    It seems to me that both are good! If cable companies start doing phone service, and phone companies start doing cable service, then neither one is going to be much of a monopoly.

    --
    Mod down posts with a "Free Mac Mini/iPod" sig, they're spam!
  19. Re:Ma Bell by __aasmho4525 · · Score: 1

    hm...

    i'd have to guess that the plans to upgrade this entire plant were on the table a year and a half (at a minimum) before the merger.

    but, as things usually happen, it took a long time for them to justify that it needed done. finally, once justification was complete, the merger happened around the bend. in order to make the merger seem plausible, they most likely shelved it until after the whole thing was over with...

    i believe you're giving credit to the wrong people... at&t probably caused your cable plant's upgrade to actually be *DELAYED* :)

    just a thought...

    (that's the way things go elsewhere in the world of US telco companies :)

  20. Re:i cannot believe this... by __aasmho4525 · · Score: 1

    correct me if i'm wrong, but you seem bitter.

    don't listen to the drivel of all the trolls that post on slashdot.

    most are just insecure in some way or another and behave like the bullies at a gradeschool playground.

    canada & the u.s. each have very serious assets and neither diminishes the other's. there certainly isn't anything wrong with any country being "better" at something than another; it's perfectly natural and healthy. once you're the "best", you get lazy, and we all know how well that motivates the human spirit...

    cheers.

    Peter

  21. Re:Movin' on up to a monopoly? by blaine · · Score: 2

    "Only" 60 channels?

    What kind of crack are you smoking? Tell me, when was the last time you strayed from the 5-10 channels you generally watch? I mean, christ, 90% of the channels out there suck so bad I can hardly believe they exist. And even the good channels generally have 1 or 2 good shows at most.

    If "only" 60 channels is an issue for you, you have WAY too much free time on your hands.

    --

    -[Blaine]- "'Oh dear,' says God, 'I hadn't thought of that,' and promptly vanishes in a puff of logic."
  22. Enough already by rw2 · · Score: 2
    I live in the suburbs of Chicago, a major city (ok, it's no New York much less San Francisco), and can't get a cable modem or DSL. To hear about Connie Corncrib getting DSL, voice and cable television is almost too much to bear!

    But seriously. I don't see how telephone lines can scale to the same level as coax. Why should I believe this is anything but a niche tech.

    --

    1. Re:Enough already by rw2 · · Score: 2
      Oops, I took so long typing that someone answered my question.

      It isn't 60 channels, it's 60 in that particular installation. Since the video is coming down the DSL on demand it could be 500 channels of choice.

      Though I guess I still wonder what happens if you have three or four TV's and everyone wants to watch different stuff.

      --

  23. Not the only people doing this by Azog · · Score: 2

    Myrio (www.myrio.com) has been doing something like this for a while. In Livingston, Texas, there are now paying customers who have TV over DSL. The Myrio system also provides video on demand, which is like having a virtual DVD player - you can rent movies over the DSL, and get full capability to pause, fast forward, rewind, and play it over again for the length of the rental period. The movie content is streamed off big NCube servers at the telco head end.

    Check the old press release at Myrio's web site.

    A little more info: Myrio's system is based on streaming MPEG-2 through full rate DSL. That's typically about 8 Mbps, and is enough bandwidth for two set top boxes to watch two different TV channels (or movies) simultaneously. There's no real limit to the number of TV channels the system can handle. The video quality is very high - movies are very close to DVD, and TV is better than regular cable.

    Full disclosure - I work for Myrio. I don't know anything about MPhase.

    Torrey Hoffman (Azog)

    --
    Torrey Hoffman (Azog)
    "HTML needs a rant tag" - Alan Cox
  24. why waste bandwidth on 60 tv channels???? by jilles · · Score: 3

    I can only watch one channel at the time. Why waste all this bandwidth on stuff you cannot possibly watch anyway. Put the tuner on the other side of the cable and switch channels remotely. All the extra bandwidth can be used for regular internet usage. As a matter of fact, why not stream that remaining channel over TCP/IP anyway?

    I don't see the problem, the bandwidth exists (i.e. your phone line), there's hardware (mpeg encoding and decoding chips). What's holding things back??

    And by the way, 60 channels is not enough.

    --

    Jilles
    1. Re:why waste bandwidth on 60 tv channels???? by Smitty825 · · Score: 2

      I can only watch one channel at the time. Why waste all this bandwidth on stuff you cannot possibly watch anyway.

      I understand your point, but the only way that cable has competed against satallite is that the cable companies allow you to hook up as many TVs as you like for the same amount of money (and no extra equipment, except for speciality channels)

      It's really important to some people that they can watch whatever program they want, while their spouse watches another, and each of their 1+ kids watches seperate programs in their own rooms. (IIRC, DirecTv or The Dish Network don't allow you to hook up more than 4 TVs per dish)

      --

      Doh!
    2. Re:why waste bandwidth on 60 tv channels???? by bigdavex · · Score: 1
      I can only watch one channel at the time. Why waste all this bandwidth on stuff you cannot possibly watch anyway. Put the tuner on the other side of the cable and switch channels remotely. All the extra bandwidth can be used for regular internet usage.
      Right. That's exactly how they do it.
      As a matter of fact, why not stream that remaining channel over TCP/IP anyway?
      Because TCP isn't an efficient protocol for video. If you miss frames of video, you don't want them resent. You just drop 'em.
      --
      -Dave
    3. Re:why waste bandwidth on 60 tv channels???? by Aurelius42 · · Score: 1

      Why is 60 tv channels not enough? No, this is not a troll, but seriously, if you had a real genuine choice in your TV programming, would you suffer by "only having 60 channels"? I would actually have hard times deciding what to watch, since everything you receive is something you wanted. I can't think of many people who regularly watch > 60 channels where a program they want is not simulcast on another station.

  25. Re:If they can do this why only 100Mbps over Cat5? by eMBee · · Score: 1
    so this means that families will be forced to actually agree on what they watch, even though everybody has their own tv.
    i like that ;-)
    but it also means that i can't record one channel, while i watch another, drat!

    greetings, eMBee.
    --

    --
    Gnu is Not Unix / Linux Is Not UniX
  26. Re:How about 60,000 in Phoenix by slickwillie · · Score: 2

    Qwest (formerly USWest) offers VDSL service in Phoenix to about 60k homes, and I think they plan to expand to other states.

  27. Re:Movin' on up to a monopoly? by costas · · Score: 2

    It's not 60 channels, it's UNLIMITED channels. mPhase basically uses an 1.2-1.4 DSL link to pipe ONE channel of video down your phone line into their set-top box. The number of channels is limited by how much bandwidth they have going into the ELEC's central office. Basically, their set-top "dials in" into a video stream. What I'd like to find out is how (and if) you can do time-shifts (i.e. TiVo or VCR-like services).

    At least that's my understanding of the technology --the bitrate was back-of-the-envelope bitrate of an MPEG2/4 video, I am sure others can do better.

  28. Re:No thanks! by costas · · Score: 2

    Well, one thing that you might want to consider is that as per FCC regs, phone lines have strict QoS (Quality of Service) rules, mainly for 911-lifeline services. In other words if your phone line goes down, the phone company (probably your local Bell) *has* to fix it ASAP. As long as the network routing part of the deal (the DSL provider's job) is also decent (i.e. 99+% uptime) your DSL Video service *should* be way more reliable than Cable.

    Of course, usual disclaimers apply :-)...

  29. Re:hmmm by costas · · Score: 2

    Europe. Most of Southern Europe has no cable network whatsoever, and CATV penetration in the north is pretty bad (~50% I think). VoDSL needs no extra infrastructure, just 'clean' copper. mPhase could make *loads* of money.

  30. Re:i cannot believe this... by leighjames · · Score: 1
    We've had something like this installed here in Wisconsin Rapids, WI. It works by transmitting three MPEG video streams plus a (upto) 1Mbps data stream over an ADSL connection. Picture quality is good---it seems better to me than AT&T's digital cable. Caveat is that you have to be close to the CO, or to one of the neighbourhood "hubs" that the telco is installing.

    Visit this if you're interested. Not much about the tech, just the service offering.

    Leigh

  31. cool, but by kettch · · Score: 1

    While it is good practice to try to make the best of the old stuff that we have. This sort of thing would take to long to implement, and would never become mainstream before new stuff came out. Eventually we are going to have to rebuild the infrastructure of the phone system anyway because it is so old and decaying.
    ----------------------

    --
    Opportunities multiply as they are seized. --Sun-Tzu
  32. Re:VDSL by cr0sh · · Score: 2

    Yeah - I heard about this a while back, and my GF's friend's daughter ('s barber's cousin's brother...) has it. That is the only install of it I have seen in the entire valley. The picture is good (same as COX Digital), but the menuing options and other things aren't as refined.

    There is no advertisement that I have found anywhere in the valley for this service. I am not even sure why they offer it...

    Worldcom - Generation Duh!

    --
    Reason is the Path to God - Anon
  33. Re:Nothing New by jerralb · · Score: 1

    http://www.prnewswire.com/cgi-bin/stories.pl?ACCT= 104&STORY=/www/story/01-22-2001/0001409257&EDATE=

    This may provide more detail.

    Sorry, I am not an html whiz.

  34. Re:My (former) telco is doing this. by SETY · · Score: 1

    You'll notice that Vibe is limited to about 240k/s d/l speed from the CO. The rest of the signal is not used. This is reserved for the TV signal. Which is switched at the CO, one channel at a time is sent across the DSL line and decoded by the mpeg set-top box.
    Kind of funny how limited to 240K/s is still faster than most other places in the world's DSL....

  35. Yeah, it's been around for 2-3 years, actually! by xtal · · Score: 5

    Disclaimer: I work for iMagicTV, and we've been developing this stuff for some time, and have a bunch of major customers. If you're interested in how this stuff works, not just from the customer perspective but the backend stuff that the telco is running too.

    This is nothing new, and has been available in middle-of-nowhere Atlantic Canada for some time, but since we're not part of the USA (yet), it must not count.

    It WOULD be a feat if they got 60 channels simultaneously multicast over DSL, but that's just not possible. They have a bunch of seperate streams that you can tune into.

    --
    ..don't panic
    1. Re:Yeah, it's been around for 2-3 years, actually! by dyskordus · · Score: 1
      Qwest also offers something similar in Denver called Choice TV and Online. It has been around for at least 1.5 years, if not more.

      --
      "Reality is less than television."-Brian Oblivion
  36. Re:Yeah, right. by British · · Score: 4

    This is just great. Now with the snip of your wires at the demarc, you will now:

    1. won't have internet access
    2. won't have telephone access
    3. won't be able to watch tv.

    Might as well just go outside at that point.

  37. Re:My (former) telco is doing this. by TheTomcat · · Score: 2

    I've pulled 250K/sec from [menace] (side note: being unb, you likely know what menace is, and since when is it unb.edu, not unb.ca ?), over my vibe line in Moncton.

    But yes, anything over 200K/sec is very impressive. I'm sitting on crappy Bell Sympatico High Speed here, and it truly sucks the nut. 120K/sec downstream, 15K/sec upstream. Pathetic.

  38. My (former) telco is doing this. by TheTomcat · · Score: 4

    My (former) telephone company was doing this before I left the province (last October).

    It doesn't translate directly to the standard coax that we're used to coming out of our walls, but a special connection that plugs into a 'tuner' box, and 'tunes' one channel at a time, much the same way small-dish sattelite 'tuners' work.

    Anyone I've asked has said that it hasn't hurt ADSL performance (same network as the VibeTV stuff) too much.

    NBTel's supposed to be worldclass in telecommunications (or something). After all, one of my hometown's main industries is hosting callcenters. That's right. You call AOL customer service, you get Moncton(Riverview), NB, Canada. Same with Equifax.

    Oops, drifting offtopic. Anyway, my point was that this is being done, and it's similar quality to small-dish sattelite TV (Bell Expressview, or Starchoice in Canada).

    Before the cable company in NB got bought by Shaw/Rogers, they were talking about providing telephone service. Stange how things get twisted around.

  39. Before anyone gets too excited by asianflu · · Score: 2

    Mphase, stock ticker XDSL.BB, is a company fast running out of friends and money. Hart Telephone is owned by one of the directors of Mphase, and they've been hawking this box around the telcos for over a year, nobody is interested. Its too expensive, its completely non standard, needs the content to be fed to the CO (head-end), but has no idea how to get it there, and the company that produces it, and its affiliates, has a certain air of, well, lets say it doesnt smell right.. they've been sucking up small investors with a promise of IPO, now a promise of just a nasdaq listing, and spending the money on, if I read the accounts correctly, mainly management renumeration..
    CNNFN, I think, got suckered by this story.
    You can read all the dirty laundry on ragingbull.com, any searches with terms such as confict of interest, fraud, investigation and so on will find old posts that reveal more.. of course, this is just my humble opinion. The people that stuck their money into that stock at $20 (now at $2) are pretty anxious to get their head back above water.

  40. hot diggity! by theonetruekeebler · · Score: 1
    My family has a trailer on Lake Hartwell, swear to God. The floor's half rotted out, as my fatass uncle found out one drunk afternoon. But there's a phone line coming to it, sure enough.

    OTOH, my own downtown Atlanta neighborhood of Grant Park is behind a pair of DACs, so no DSL for me and there are too many trees and highrises for me to get a Dish.

    My mind is positively blown that to get the cutting edge in consumer bandwidth, TV and telephony, I have to move out to the GODDAMNED STICKS! What the hell is the world coming to when there's a DSL line coming to within walking distance of my fatass uncle's still?

    So please, Mr. Georgia Tech graduate, wouldja put the friggin' bandwidth where the friggin' people live?

    --

    --
    This is not my sandwich.
  41. Re:Ma Bell by lizrd · · Score: 5

    I've really had a very good experience with AT&T Cable internet. The price is reasonable, the speed is quite fast (I downloaded some disk images last month at over 200KB/s, note: KB not Kb) they were quite prompt about getting the installation done. If I remember correctly, I called in on a Thursday and they came the following Wednesday, and it was a holiday weekend. Two working days later is a very good turn around time. Since getting service in July I've only had one network outage that I've noticed, and it lasted less than 2 hours. The only thing that I can complain about is that their mail and news servers are kind of slow and go down sometimes. I'd recommend not using the e-mail address you get from them for anything other than billing information.
    _____________

    --
    I don't want free as in beer. I just want free beer.
  42. Re:Movin' on up to a monopoly? by dbarclay10 · · Score: 5

    I live in Canada, and I'll adress a few of your points from a Canadian perspective:

    1) Very few people trust their local telco. I certainly don't trust them even with DSL, let alone with cable access.

    I trust my local telephone company. In my life, I've never been without telephone service. I'm serious. There was a tornado nearby once, and the power(and cable access) was out for nearly a day - but we still had our phones.

    I've witnessed dozens of cable outages. While generally short(usually around an hour), a few have lasted upwards of a day or two.

    2) When was the last time a cable system in a big city (where the rollout would probably start, as it usually does) was economically viable with only 60 channels?

    In most parts of Canada, you need to pay an extra 10-15 dollars(Canadian) to get 60 channels. Regular service has about 30-40. I think the most you can actually get(no matter how much money you have), short of getting a satellite dish, is about 75 or a hundred.

    3) Think about the cable signal over copper lines. If you're in an area with fibre optics, great. But if not, your cable reception could be evil.

    I'll agree that I think this is a backwards step. We should be moving away from old telephone lines to something approaching TV cable, or ideally, fibre. However, most of my region(I live in a town of 10,000 people) have fibre optics. In fact, I have fibre going right up to across the street(where there's a big telephone company box of some sort). Mind you, my impression is that Canada(and especially Ontario) is rather well-connected.

    4) 95% (at least) of all municipalities that have cable available for residents have a long term contract in place. To switch to a telco for this would require some nifty sidestepping of issues.

    I don't know anyone who has a long-term cable contract. It's always monthly.

    5) Imagine cable support through your telco.

    I was recently chatting with someone about this :) They were from Texas, I think, and had problems because of the local telephone company monopoly. They moved to an area with more competition, and things got better.

    Well, I've got news :) Up until about five years ago, there was only ONE telephone carrier available in my area. And they were just fine :) No serious problems, technicians always made it out when they said they would(although, sometimes[if it wasn't a serious problem], you'd have to wait a few days). Perfectly well-behaved.

    The point? Don't bash the technology because the people who are initially using it arn't the nicest people in the world. If this makes it into my city before cable broadband access does, I'll sign up for it.

    Barclay family motto:
    Aut agere aut mori.
    (Either action or death.)

    --

    Barclay family motto:
    Aut agere aut mori.
    (Either action or death.)
  43. hmmm. by jmccay · · Score: 1

    The must be using a better DSL than the standard ADSL the most providers use. Maybe the ISDN DSL (IDSL or what ever it's called).

    I don't I would get it to start. I wonder if they are providing local stations? I also wonder if they are a middle man and they are just getting it from the local cable company. This might have a future in places where cable doesn't go currently.

    --
    At the next eco-hypocrisy-meeting, count the private jets used to get to the meeting. Should be interesting to see that
    1. Re:hmmm. by N8Magic · · Score: 1

      The Alcatel DSL equipment we use at the telco I work at currently maxes out at 2Mbit per sec up and 8 Mbit per second down. (and we've had this equip for a couple years.)

      The telco's just throttle it wayyyyyy back to conserve bandwidth. Although, even the most basic cut-rate DSL service here is 256Kbit up/ 1MBit per second. If you have the cash, you CAN get the maxed out speeds though.

    2. Re:hmmm. by tjb · · Score: 1

      VDSL is great if you live across the street from the CO, but most of us don't.

      Anyway, standard DMT ADSL is easily capable of 8 Mbit/s up to 9 kilofeet if the provider is willing to shell out for the backend bandwidth; unforutunately, most providers don't.

  44. Re:Movin' on up to a monopoly? by sydbarrett74 · · Score: 1

    Localities grant long-term franchises to operators who use *coax* plant. But that says nothing of those who want to offer cable TV over a *twisted-pair* plant. I say this is an excellent development: in my city (Richmond, VA), AT&T Broadband shows no signs of opening up its infrastructure to competitors, and I'm sick of paying exorbitant prices for the 5 channels I actually watch.

    --
    'He who has to break a thing to find out what it is, has left the path of wisdom.' -- Gandalf to Saruman
  45. So what happens when... by AugstWest · · Score: 2

    ...you're playing Quake, and your roommate turns on the TV...

    It's all well and good to say that you won't notice latency in your TV signal because it's coming in on a controlled network, but do you want your TV eating up your bandwidth?

    They're already doing this in Canada as well.

  46. Competition by commrade · · Score: 1

    Finally there will be some competition among tv providers. In my area this will mean Qwest versus AT&T. This was needed to match the cable phone service that AT&T is going to be offering soon. Lets hope they stay balanced, those are the only two signal-quality wires that go to alot of peoples houses.

  47. /. says it's new, so it *must* be new ... by JoeGee · · Score: 1

    Silly me, here I thought DSL came about after the deregulation of the American cable industry as a means for telcos to deliver video to customers' homes ...

    What was I thinking, I am glad /. says it's new, even though it has been deployed for a year by Ameritech Cable in at least one market I am familiar with ...

    You can just learn something new every day around here. Gosh and golly, isn't that just ducky? :)

    This is your /., this is your /. on drugs. Any questions?

    --

    Get off my virtual lawn, you damned virtual kids!
  48. Re:If they can do this why only 100Mbps over Cat5? by shivas · · Score: 2

    You are assuming that they are simulataneously broadcasting all 60 channels over the DSL. I think only the compressed stream for the channel that you have selected on your SETTOP box will be sent on the DSL.

    Siva

  49. ntl beat you by almost a year by CookyPuss · · Score: 1

    And?
    If you look here, you'll see that ntl in the UK have been doing this for a while now. For £19.99+/month you get 512kbps downstream, a load of TV channels, very cheap phone calls (3p/min max) and video-on-demand. And that's just on the analogue service. I don't know what they do on the digital service...
    -- Nick

    --
    You sad, lonely motherfucker. Get a life.
  50. homechoice in the uk by Mark__ · · Score: 1

    As far as I'm aware, we already have this in the UK too, and it's on demand tv. Feel free to correct me if I'm wrong anyone?

  51. Re:Another way to look at this... by jbridge21 · · Score: 2

    The difference between copper and fiber is, they're already using fiber quite efficiently.

    With the copper wires running to your house, they were only using about 8 KHz of bandwidth before, whereas the cable could carry much more. Adding stuff like DSL and TV just uses more of the bandwidth.

    With fiber, you're already using a large part of the optical spectrum in large installations, and the glass will not transmit efficiently past certain wavelength boundaries.
    -----

  52. Re:Movin' on up to a monopoly? by Zaphod+B · · Score: 2

    I trust my local telephone company. In my life, I've never been without telephone service. I'm serious. There was a tornado nearby once, and the power(and cable access) was out for nearly a day - but we still had our phones.

    Point conceded. Phones tend to be more reliable during disasters (though this does vary based on your location.

    I've witnessed dozens of cable outages. While generally short(usually around an hour), a few have lasted upwards of a day or two.

    Perhaps I'm lucky, but I have had no cable outages since I got cable in 1986, save for when power was out to the distribution centre, which didn't matter because it was out for me as well. Phones, however, I have seen be out for extended periods due to emergency maintenance (this was before they were buried underground).

    In most parts of Canada, you need to pay an extra 10-15 dollars(Canadian) to get 60 channels. Regular service has about 30-40. I think the most you can actually get(no matter how much money you have), short of getting a satellite dish, is about 75 or a hundred.

    Here in the U.S. (specifically metropolitan Southern California), you pay an extra $5 for the extra channels, and then (if available) an extra $5 for the digital tier (which, if you have premium channels, greatly increases the number of available channels).

    I don't know anyone who has a long-term cable contract. It's always monthly.

    Municipalities generally contract out with one cable provider to provide cable for the residents of the city. Residents pay monthly; the contract length between the municipality and the cable provider varies but averages around 3-5 years. When the contract is up, the cable provider and and of their competitors may petition for consideration for the new contract.

    Well, I've got news :) Up until about five years ago, there was only ONE telephone carrier available in my area. And they were just fine :) No serious problems, technicians always made it out when they said they would(although, sometimes[if it wasn't a serious problem], you'd have to wait a few days). Perfectly well-behaved.

    The point? Don't bash the technology because the people who are initially using it arn't the nicest people in the world. If this makes it into my city before cable broadband access does, I'll sign up for it.

    You've been very lucky, then, and it seems like Ontario would be a good place to be if you wanted good phone service. Here, unfortunately, you have your choice between the unwilling ("I hate my job"), the incapable ("Um. I can't fix this right now even though you waited six hours for me. My supervisor can come out a week from Tuesday"), or the simply missing ("WHERE IS MY PHONE TECH?"). Mostly it's simple cluelessness and an amazing lack of initiative that would make any geek blanch with horror.

    As for bashing the technology, it seems like the bandwidth used to provide this should be put toward the improvement of the signals already carried on the line, i.e., DSL and voice. I agree that any development which results in a choice improves the market, but support is an integral part of that choice, and Joe Shmo who isn't a geek needs to have at least reasonable support.

    Thanks for your examples and the courteous reply.

    --
    Zaphod B
    When duplication is outlawed, only outlaws will have /bin/cp
  53. Movin' on up to a monopoly? by Zaphod+B · · Score: 4

    Well, surprise, surprise. After the cable companies found out that they could carry Net access over their lines, I'm not surprised at this retaliation. But let's look at it: 1) Very few people trust their local telco. I certainly don't trust them even with DSL, let alone with cable access. 2) When was the last time a cable system in a big city (where the rollout would probably start, as it usually does) was economically viable with only 60 channels? 3) Think about the cable signal over copper lines. If you're in an area with fibre optics, great. But if not, your cable reception could be evil. 4) 95% (at least) of all municipalities that have cable available for residents have a long term contract in place. To switch to a telco for this would require some nifty sidestepping of issues. 5) Imagine cable support through your telco. Not to pick on my unnamed local telco which starts with V and ends in N and has a giant gaping intelligence gap between, but they can't even support DSL, and they're just barely able to offer what might be considered reasonable service for their phone lines. I don't see a great amount of competition for $CABLE_PROVIDER in the near future.

    --
    Zaphod B
    When duplication is outlawed, only outlaws will have /bin/cp
    1. Re:Movin' on up to a monopoly? by softsign · · Score: 2
      I trust my local telephone company. In my life, I've never been without telephone service. I'm serious. There was a tornado nearby once, and the power(and cable access) was out for nearly a day - but we still had our phones.
      Heh, where were you during the Great BBQ of '99? When one of Bell's COs caught fire in downtown Toronto, knocking out phone and internet service for a good-sized chunk of Canada? That lasted a few days until they could get everything back up again, IIRC. =)

      --

    2. Re:Movin' on up to a monopoly? by compwizrd · · Score: 1

      Re: Point #2
      Here we go. Pulled out the monthly spam from Bell ExpressVu.

      City - Channels, Cost/month $CDN (1.5CDN = 1US)

      Thunder Bay - 54, 36.46
      Ajax - 64, 39.39
      Oakville - 64, 41.99
      London (North) - 65, 38.84
      Toronto - 65, 39.88
      Ottawa(East) - 67, 35.92
      Richmond Hill - 69, 43.26

      One of expressvu's packages claims to have 106 channels, for 36.95 a month, by comparision.
      9 movie channels is another 16 bucks a month.

      Or you can pay nothing, and get them all ;)

    3. Re:Movin' on up to a monopoly? by nitehawk214 · · Score: 1

      5-10 channels is plenty for me.. problem is that 95% of channels you get suck.. So I have to live with digital cable's 250 channels of crap so I can get the 3 or 4 channels I actually care about...

      --
      I'm a good cook. I'm a fantastic eater. - Steven Brust
    4. Re:Movin' on up to a monopoly? by NonSequor · · Score: 1
      At home our cable company is our telephone company. This company Knology came into the region a few years ago. We got a package deal with cable, cable modem, local phone, and long distance for a good price. It took a little bit of time to get everything installed, but it certainly didn't take the three months one guy said he waited for DSL. I'm in college right now (Georgia Tech actually) so I'm not getting to enjoy the 6 months of free digital cable that my parents are getting right now.


      "Homo sum: humani nil a me alienum puto"
      (I am a man: nothing human is alien to me)

      --
      My only political goal is to see to it that no political party achieves its goals.
  54. The South Will Rise Again! by Cheshire+Cat · · Score: 1

    Great. Now we can have interactive Hee-Haw. I feel the rush of the 21st century.

    --

    Last night I shot an elephant in my pajamas. How he got in my pajamas I'll never know.
  55. Pick what I want by defaultXIX · · Score: 1
    Maybe since its just locks onto one stream at a time, and does time shifting, I could pick out only the shows I wanna watch this week and have it only show me those shows and only have to pay for those shows, could be a time and money saver, only what I want, none of the crap.
    • Probably too good of an idea for it to ever happen.
  56. Information Age Barriers by Artagel · · Score: 2

    #define RANT

    I suppose what I want to know is: Why weren't these barriers knocked down before?

    Negroponte makes it clear in BEING DIGITAL that he thought a long time ago that this sort of thing was possible and practical. I've been largely of the belief that if this was somehow thwarted by the pre-1996 competitive marketplace, that the Telecommunications Act of 1996 should have solved it. Still, we wait for the market in these services to change, and it doesn't.

    Finally, someone takes an interest in doing this (and only on a small scale). This is a test reaching some 60 customers. 1) Why wasn't it done before? 2) Even if it is made to work, how many decades will it take to reach me because nobody wants to really compete and shake things up out there? I can't believe that this is such a fundamental technical breakthrough, and the real barrier has been "business" decision makers who can't confront changed business models.

    #undef RANT

    1. Re:Information Age Barriers by mmaddox · · Score: 1

      Why weren't these barriers knocked down before?

      Simple. Your telcos have been relying on old technology, in which they have a substantial investment in time, knowledge, and, above all, money.

      No one, even modern telcos, likes to put money toward something that may or may not be the Next Big Thing, but will certainly require a deviation from the established manner of doing things. This requires a leap of faith that few are comfortable with, especially those conservative souls who serve as Directors for a large corporation.

      Being Slashdotters, we easily recognize the benefits of quick advancements in technology, and find it unfathomable that such incredible improvements should sit idle while the moneychangers haggle and worry. We just don't see the fear in the eyes of those same moneychangers, nor do we feel it in our hearts.

      Luckily, the clamor for faster, wider pipes is becoming loud enough to be heard in the top-floor boardrooms. As the din increases, you'll see more and more improvement, starting in the areas that show the most benefit for the costs: metropolitan areas. It may take awhile before it gets to the rural areas, because it's all about money, man.

      --

      What'dya mean there's no BLINK tag!?

    2. Re:Information Age Barriers by Auckerman · · Score: 4
      "I suppose what I want to know is: Why weren't these barriers knocked down before?"

      Where there is already a govt sanctioned monolopy that offeres a comparable service that is proven to work and is affordable, why would any competitor come to YOUR town and set up shop. No guaranteed customers. Which is probabally why it's first appearing in a "small town" where in the article it mentions that the cable company wouldn't hookup a line to his business for just one subscriber....

      --

      Burn Hollywood Burn
  57. Re:Ma Bell by Kwelstr · · Score: 1

    Bah, try Covad's DSL. I got mine is less than 3 weeks, only problem is they use pppoe instead of DHCP, but it's a small price to pay for fast service and reliable connection.

    --


    ~~~Please pass the salt, I hate unsalted MD5s :-/
  58. Re:In the UK we call have it too www.homechoice.co by Kwelstr · · Score: 1

    it costs #20/month...

    Well, if it only costs 20 tic-tac-doh a month then it is worth it, by golly!

    --


    ~~~Please pass the salt, I hate unsalted MD5s :-/
  59. My Telco is Doing this... and I work there! by DTCDAN · · Score: 1
    I live in a small town in upstate NY that is deploying TV and highspeed data over VDSL using equipment from Next Level Communications. I've been involved with this project from the beginning, and I must say, this technology is very cool. Currently, to my apartment, I've got the capability of 3 separate, simultaneous channels of video, and up to a 2.5 Mbps symetrical data connection. The article on CNN made it sound like there would be 60 seperate channels of video simultaneously, but I think that they meant that that is how many are available on the system total. The equipment that we use maxes out around 150 channels, but when the smoke clears on our project, I think that we'll have around 120. Each channel is MPEG-2 encoded at around 8 megs of bandwidth, but the picture quality is still quite impressive. The actual VDSL signal that arrives at the home is between 25 and 32 megs, if I recall correctly.

    Some things that we've run into:

    • Regulatory Issues - NY Public Service Commission is a sloth about approving franchises
    • Cable plant quality - bridge taps and load coils wreak havoc on VDSL signal (surprise)
    • Multi-vendor projects can make it very difficult to point fingers during configuration troubles
    • Limited reach of VDSL signal - necessitates building out fiber plant for the "Fiber To The Neighborhood" concept. Not too big a deal in a metro area, but can be problematic in the rurals.

    This project has had its headaches, but it has been great experience to work with so many high-end network devices. It rocks to work for a small company in a small town and have access to such cutting-edge technology!

    1. Re:My Telco is Doing this... and I work there! by DTCDAN · · Score: 1

      I should clarify my intial sentence. It's not the "small town" that's deploying VDSL, it's the company I work for, Delhi Telephone Company.

  60. wow by Lord+Omlette · · Score: 1

    All that, and the government pays for your health care. And I think pound for pound (gram for gram?!) you guys have more colleges that offer courses in game development than the US does. Now you're telling me you can trust your friendly Canadian telco? Someone tell me please why I'm still in Jersey...

    The poster you were responding to was talking about American telcos, no doubt. They all suck. I've yet to hear of one that's reliable and trustworthy.
    --
    Peace,
    Lord Omlette
    ICQ# 77863057

    --
    [o]_O
  61. TCI Redudancy (or lack thereof) by clyons · · Score: 2
    Before being taken over by AT&T, TCI Cable rebuilt the cable system in the Des Moines, Iowa area. They put in a fiber backbone, but there seems to be no battery backups for their equipment, nor does there seem to be any real redudancy. Power outages in certain areas have left entire cities without their cable or cable internet service, simply because the single fiber route had a power interruption. Also, despite the fiber backbone, some areas still have crappy reception of analog channels. A friend of mine lives less then a mile from the head end, and has this problem.

    --

    --

    --
    Intelligence is definitely a recessive trait.

  62. Does it mean... by SpanishInquisition · · Score: 1

    ...that I can use my Answering Machine as a VCR?

    --
    Je t'aime Stéphanie
  63. Oh great by stilwebm · · Score: 1

    Another technology that excludes the other 95% of us who live more than 15,000 from the nearest CO.

  64. hartwell georgia is where it will by prisoner · · Score: 1

    stop. If the big telcos have anything to do with it, they will stall, fiddle and fritter away any technology that might introduce competition. Especially if you're depending on them for *any* part of the infrastructure. Just look at the DSL market. The number of companies in that "competitive" market is plummeting and prices are going up. My friendly local DSL provider just hit me with a contract renewal that is twice the rate I'm paying now. So for $100 a month I'll get 384/128....that sucks.

  65. Re:No thanks! by geekoid · · Score: 1

    When was the last time you where in a blackout that cut phone service?
    Unless it was a disaster that destroyed equipment, i would say never. OTOH you may have known that and where just trying to be funny.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  66. Re:If they can do this why only 100Mbps over Cat5? by Wesley+Felter · · Score: 2

    If you are lucky, you can get ~ 6 Mbps downstream on ADSL, so I guess you could watch 3 different channels. Better watch out if you have 4 TVs, though.

  67. Re:Ma Bell by Fishstick · · Score: 2

    Think it depends greatly on what region/market you are talking about. Here, AT&T took over from MediaOne and the service has been superb. I've heard that if you are in a former TCI area, it isn't always as great.

    Remember, it hasn't been AT&T doing cable for 50 years suddenly doing broadband internet. AT&T bought their way into this market in the last few years and they bought different companies with varying degrees of competence. It takes a _long_ time for a company to get its acquired workers assimilated into the 'borg'. Hell, I should know... my company was bought out 14 years ago and we _still_ refer to them as the 'evil empire'.

    --

    There is much cruelty in the universe, John.
    Yeah, we seem to have the tour map.

  68. Re:Ma Bell by Fishstick · · Score: 2

    Yeah, I had TCI in the last place I lived before I moved into my house where MediaOne served. They certainly were the worst I've ever seen. They would cut out 2-3 times a week and forget about talking to anyone in customer service. I know AT&T has spent big-bucks to lay a lot of hybrid fiber/coax in the areas it acquired in buying out TCI.

    --

    There is much cruelty in the universe, John.
    Yeah, we seem to have the tour map.

  69. hmmm by Brolly · · Score: 2

    While this may be possible, the question one has to really ask is...why do it? The people in the article seem to be happier about the fast internet service than the tv stations, and I would be too. Seems like a useless technology to me, for the most part.

    1. Re:hmmm by Guignol · · Score: 1

      No it's not..
      in fact it's pretty much the best thing *they* can have.
      The trick is they don't broadcast you. they give ou what you want to see. I tried something similar with a disguised internet-tv set top box.
      But I was still using broadcast tv and the set top box was tunning the channels to provide the famous 'context-sensitive' tv interaction, thus bringing the user real interactive tv, with a real broadcast, running a site with time/channel aware contents. (something lik that, well you get the picture)
      Anyway, the real good thing about it, and that's why this last one is better, is that the service provider will tune for you, thus will know exactly what you are watching, when, knowing who you are giving precise statistics and even real time ratings, which is very very good business.
      Giving much more acurat ratings, than the statistic inquiries methods, providing an invalueable information to advertising companies.
      Oh well..

    2. Re:hmmm by dlkf · · Score: 1

      The advantage is that this would create competition and choices for cable TV. Granted, there would be about as much choice as voting for the president, but ill take what I can get.

  70. Re:Impressive, but by bigdavex · · Score: 1
    What I want to know is what compression they are using?
    MPEG-2
    To sqeeze 60 channels into a DSL line is quite a feat (since you can STILL use DSL at the same time),
    It's switched at the head end. Only the channels you're watching go down your phone line.
    --
    -Dave
  71. Re:Impressive, but by seanmeister · · Score: 2
    To sqeeze 60 channels into a DSL line is quite a feat (since you can STILL use DSL at the same time)

    A Google search for 'mPhase Traverser' gives a lot of sources for info on this technology, but I don't see anything that says that it's actually streaming 60 channels simultaneously over DSL. You're only watching one channel at a time, maybe it's only receiving one at a time?
    Sean

  72. Re:Cable/phone/DSL by Rackemup · · Score: 1

    Wouldn't 24 phone lines over 1 copper pair be otherwise known as a T1? all you have to do is multiplex the signals and send them down the same pipe... the problem is keeping the signals in good shape when they get to the other end...

  73. i cannot believe this... by Rackemup · · Score: 4
    "Georgia is the test site for a new technology developed at the Georgia Tech Research Institute... "

    I laughed when I read this little piece of "breaking news"... This kinda technology has been in use for over a year in Moncton, New Brunswick CANADA... yeah that's right... Canada...

    I lived there while they were rolling it out last year, never got to test it myself since it wasnt available on my street, but I hear it was comparable with cable. Check it out if you want http://www.nbtel.nb.ca , click on Vibevision for more info.

    1. Re:i cannot believe this... by Nos. · · Score: 1

      They were talking about this a while back here in Saskatchewan here about a year or so ago, but last I heard there was a big hold up because one of the cable companines (Rogers?) was complaining to the CRTC. Does anyone have any more info on this (especially pertaining to Sask)? Thanks

    2. Re:i cannot believe this... by WebCowboy · · Score: 1

      What I cannot believe is that such an attitude exists in a supposedly forward-thinking internet forum such as Slashdot. But I suppose if the goal is to post troll and flamebait messages it doesn't mean this is the author's actual opinion.

      Slashdot is a global forum. The USA is not the world, and not everything interesting or new happens in the USA. For example, wireless technology is big now. Leaders in wireless include famous big companies such as Eriksson, Nokia, Philips, Nortel and newcomers like RIM and WiLAN. NONE of them are based in the USA.

      The US is also not the best at everything. DSL in Alberta, Canada is faster, more widely available and more reliable than in California, USA (home of Silicon Valley of all places!). In Calgary, new wired neighbourhoods are being developed. Some of the best in communication technology seems to originate in large, sparsely-populated Canada.

      The USA is also NOT the place to be if you want the latest in small, powerful consumer electronics. Not since the days of Atari and Coleco has ANYTHING big in the home videogame industry been available to Americans first. I could go on but I've more than made my point.

      As for taking what you like, it was recently reported that the value of acquisitions made by Canadian companies of US ones exceeded that of US companies buying Canadian ones. Also, Canada will stop sending its people to see US doctors as soon as the US stops bussing needy pensioners to Canada to get their prescription drugs.

    3. Re:i cannot believe this... by SVDave · · Score: 1

      What Novus Telecom is offering is a fiber-optic connection that provides cable TV, telephone and Internet services. The technology being deployed in Hartwell, Georgia does the same thing, but with existing copper phone wires.

    4. Re:i cannot believe this... by jmcneill · · Score: 1

      I was watching a demonstration of VibeVision at the NBTel Cellular store in McAllister Place (Saint John) and I wasn't impressed with the quality.. MPEG artifacts were very obvious on the screen, nowhere near the quality I had expected. Any plans on VibeVision over HFC? Or are the older Vibe customers SOL (which seems the case for most things -- I do _not_ want DSL).

    5. Re:i cannot believe this... by Big+Brass+Balls · · Score: 1
      This kinda technology has been in use for over a year in Moncton, New Brunswick Piffle. Vancouver, BC (also in Canada) has had it available for more than 4 years now.

      This link to Novus Telecom can be used as evidence.

      --

      --
      Do I play Hockey?
      What you say!!
    6. Re:i cannot believe this... by Big+Brass+Balls · · Score: 1

      Take off, eh?

      --

      --
      Do I play Hockey?
      What you say!!
    7. Re:i cannot believe this... by dlkf · · Score: 1

      From what I can tell from your link(please correct me if I am wrong), it looks more like Novus is putting fiber into the homes. What the article is talking about is using the existing phone lines to deliver TV. These are two completely different things.

    8. Re:i cannot believe this... by ColdPepsi · · Score: 1

      This is absolutely true. But it doesn't count because it isn't in the USA. Georgia tech will no doubt get a patent for this 'cutting edge' work.

  74. Re:In the UK we call have it too www.homechoice.co by SigVn · · Score: 1

    How much is cable a month in the UK?

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    Yes I can not spell...Wait....for a second there I almost cared.
  75. Re:Ma Bell by SquadBoy · · Score: 1

    Yup I'm looking at going cable just to get away from Qworst. How does AT&Ts broadband thing comapre?

    --

    Cypherpunks: Civil Liberty Through Complex Mathematics. Those who live by the sword die by the arrow.
  76. Re:Ma Bell by SquadBoy · · Score: 1

    That would depend on your ISP and location. I'm on the 29.99 plan. I get over 600K almost without exception and have 1 static IP throught my ISP all for just about $50 a month. My only problem with Qworst has been that twice in the past year I have been with no phone for more than 2 days at a time. I've been hearing good things about AT&T in my area (SLC) but it is no go so far.

    --

    Cypherpunks: Civil Liberty Through Complex Mathematics. Those who live by the sword die by the arrow.
  77. Mod this Up as informative by loraksus · · Score: 1
    This "new technology" as it's being touted was actually created in the late 80's as a "pay per view" product. A set top box would connect to a fone line and provide payperview as well as regular stations. Then some people got together and said "what if we could run computer data on this" (Payper view was digital)
    Thus the advent of DSL.

    Not new, and yes... I think verizon has the experience needed to give this a bad rep. Oh well...

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  78. iTV in Hong Kong by i-Chaos · · Score: 1

    They've had this technology for YEARS in Hong Kong. It's called iTV (interactive TV) and is essentially VoD (Video on Demand) with timeshifting and all (but I think all that is done server-side). High-speed internet access with that goes without saying (DSL).

    --
    ...I am proof that intelligent beings are not always intelligent...
  79. No thanks! by TheNecromancer · · Score: 2
    Hmmm, cable TV, DSL and my phone service all on one set of lines? No thanks, I'll keep my phone service separate(cellphone), so that when the rolling blackouts hit my area, I won't be completely cutoff from civilization!

    --
    Attention all planets of the Solar Federation! We have assumed control! - Neil Peart
  80. This is OLD tech. by downundarob · · Score: 1

    The guys at scn-inc claim to be able to deliver 200 channels over DSL, and have been doing so for some months now.

  81. VDSL in Phoenix Arizona by Delusionist · · Score: 1

    USWest (Now Qwest) was offering VDSL in Phoenix Arizona. It was about $35/month for 120 channels and $35/month for the dsl (1mbps up/down) and is a very nice service. However Qwest is not supporting it anymore due to revenue losses, I think it's only a matter of time, after seeing this article, before they start offering it up again because there will soon be competition... I love the idea and the price is right! Our dsl took less than a week to install and works awesome! I hope that other companies soon see this as a great idea and start in on the hopefully soon to be bandwagon!

  82. Re:Ma Bell by xmutex · · Score: 1

    I have AT&T Broadband cable modem access in Richmond VA (they bought out Media One) and it's been very, very solid. A few connection dropouts very seldomly, but overall, excellent service and fast speeds.

    --

    jack's bicycle is music to my ears
  83. Another way to look at this... by b0z · · Score: 2
    If they can find ways to make the copper phone lines this efficient, imagine what they could do with the fiber optic lines they are putting all over the place.

    I think financial limitations, and limits on the resources available help creativity. DSL and this are a good sign of that in my opinion. I think it's a great idea and if they can do all this with simple telephone lines I look forward to what they can do with tv cable and fiber optic connections.

    --
    Mas vale cholo, que mal acompañado.
  84. Nothing New by carlcory · · Score: 1
    Qwest has been doing this (and formerly US West was doing it) for a while using VDSL.

    The article is lacking in detail, but it sounds like they are doing VDSL or some splitting.

    Next Level Communications was Qwest's vendor.

    1. Re:Nothing New by dhovis · · Score: 1

      This is correct. I found a link that talks about Qwest's deployment of vDSL that it aquired with US West. They are currently holding back deployment some to bring their costs down to the point where they are actually making money on the service.

      I remember hearing a US West executive talking about the service on the radio (some NPR show, I think) a while back. As near as I could tell, only one "channel" was coming down your line at any time (no tape one channel, watch annother possibilities). It did have one kinda cool feature, when the phone rang, the Caller ID info would appear on your TV.
      --

      --

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      The internet is the greatest source of biased information in the history of mankind.

  85. Think about it for a second! by N8Magic · · Score: 1

    DSL = DIGITAL Subscriber Line (or Loop, whatever)

    You think they are gonna throw an analog TV signal through there with the DSL stuff?

    Nice troll anyways.

  86. A more interesting perspective by quintessent · · Score: 1

    If they can get a cable worth of information into a phone line, imagine how much bandwidth they'll get into cable lines, using similar techniques.

  87. its all about the benjamins, baby by OtaconX · · Score: 1

    well, how much is this going to cost??? and how long will it be until AOL takes this over and starts controling broadband as well...oy =(

  88. Copper Totally Sucks, Dude by alephnull42 · · Score: 1

    the test site for a new technology

    ...and in mass deployment it will have the usual problems of any 'breakthrough' technology which wants to do last mile on existing infrastructure:

    [NotQuiteAnUrbanLegend]BT cannot reliably use 25% of it's existing copper phone wiring because they don't know exactly where it is
    [ActualNewsItem]There was talk of moving a bunch of German Cable TV frequencies elsewhere in the spectrum (can you imagine... a million TV's to retune), because the badly terminated cable installations were turning buildings into antennas radiating in Aircraft Traffic Control bands.

    Of course you can send X fnurblebits of signal over a line in lab or 'test' conditions, but any mass deployment borders on the impossible, so you can either:
    - send some semi-skilled body out to every street and every house (make that every floor while you're at it) of every block etc. etc. etc. to check out the lines, or
    - get them to put in some decent fiber while they are there anyway.

    Legacy Layer 1 Hardware Sux Ass.

    --
    Not confused enough? http://translate.google.com/translate?u=www.slashdot.jp&hl=en&ie=UTF8&sl=ja&tl=en
  89. Re:Ma Bell by .oO-DexteR-Oo. · · Score: 1

    200KB? I get 600KB from MS sometimes and at least 400KB from Akamai most of the time. One question though, does Cox@Home have anything to do with AT&T or is @Home owned by AT&T?

  90. Be carefull and aware. by scum-e-bag · · Score: 1

    We should be aware that while there is a lot of available bw on a normal phone line that it isnt infinite. Limits should be placed on the types of services offered. After all what will happen when MS decides to release .NET2 and it requires 1000 times processing power and 1000 times the bw? Remeber that precedents have been set.

    --
    Does it go on forever?
  91. Yeah, make one monopoly compete another monopoly by tenzig_112 · · Score: 1
    Phone for cable, cable for phone. I can't tell which is worse...

    www.ridiculopathy.com

  92. Re:Ma Bell by nitehawk214 · · Score: 1

    TCI sucked pretty bad.. AT&T has been pretty good to us tho. 2 months after they took over they replace all the cable lines in our service area, now instead of downtime every other week, its more like every 3 or 4 months.

    --
    I'm a good cook. I'm a fantastic eater. - Steven Brust
  93. I've got a way of upping the number of channels... by human+bean · · Score: 2
    You would think after all of these years that folks would figure this out. Since you know on which wire you are sending the video stream, simply have the set-top box communicate with the central office and select the channel for that particular wire, and do the switching at the central office.

    You would think that phone guys would have thought of this...

    --

    *whup* "Get along, little electrons. Heeyah!"

  94. Re:I've got a way of upping the number of channels by human+bean · · Score: 2
    Actually, the article that was linked didn't have any reference to switching. Other backgrounds made references to servers, but still didn't give a good shot at what was being delivered down the final wire.

    Even so, one wonders what the rediculously low number of channels is about.

    --

    *whup* "Get along, little electrons. Heeyah!"

  95. Impressive, but by Auckerman · · Score: 4
    "With the addition of a set top box, users get 60 channels along with their DSL and phone line."

    While it is ALWAYS nice to have alternative ways of getting subscriber based TV (read: Cable), this really doesn't impress me as a comsumer. In my area, we have digital cable. I have 180 channels including 10 HBO channels and 10 Showtime channels. Also, built right into the cable box is a cable modem. Granted DSL has guarantted speed while cable is shared speed, it's as fast (if not faster)as normal home DSL connections most of the time.

    What I want to know is what compression they are using? To sqeeze 60 channels into a DSL line is quite a feat (since you can STILL use DSL at the same time), but feasible (you should watch Quicktime streams on a 100BaseT connection sitting on Internet2, which lets you cheat your way through parts of the internet).

    --

    Burn Hollywood Burn
    1. Re:Impressive, but by tjb · · Score: 1

      You're only watching one channel at a time, maybe it's only receiving one at a time? I work on DSL firmware for a living, and you are most certainly correct, it would only receive one, maybe two (for Picture in Picture) channels at a time. Let's take a look at how this box may work: First, I'm assuming it will be a transport layer (digital) transmission; that is, the video will be sent as special data in the bit-stream, not sent on special frequencies bands(which may or may not be better, but is 1000x harder to do and plays hell with all sorts of standards). I figure you'll get one box with a coax hook-up for your TV and an ethernet hookup for your PC. Video data ATM cells will have special ATM headers that will then be split out by the box and D-to-A'd for display on your screen, figure 3 Mbit/s per channel shot away there. Then general ATM cells will be sent down the ethernet to your PC, somewhere along the lines of 1 Mbit/s. Then we somehow have to manage channel switching. Probably the best way to do this is to put the management channel into some of the "wasted space" of the DMT (Discrete Multitone, the ADSL physical layer standard) super-frames. Unfortunately, this wouldn't exactly be standard compliant, and certainly wouldn't play nice on systems that use odd-ball framing structures, so most likely you'll need another (small) data channel to handle management. After all is said and done, you're probably looking at least 4.5Mbit/s of linerate necessary to carry this down the wire. While people in big cities might not have much of a problem with this, that kind of linerate is very difficult to achieve at more than 12 kilofeet, so I hope I live close to the CO :)

    2. Re:Impressive, but by Martin+Spamer · · Score: 1

      While it is ALWAYS nice to have alternative ways of getting subscriber based TV (read: Cable), this really doesn't impress me as a comsumer.

      The real benefit to the consumer is indirect, using xDSL technologly to deliver this type of service is signigicatly cheaper than cable because is uses the existing telephone infrastructure.

      In my area, we have digital cable. I have 180 channels including 10 HBO channels and 10 Showtime channels. Also, built right into the cable box is a cable modem. Granted DSL has guarantted speed while cable is shared speed, it's as fast (if not faster)as normal home DSL connections most of the time.

      Cable because is CSMA/CD is limited in the number of channels it can offer. xDSL because it uses point-to-point is essentially unlimited.

      What I want to know is what compression they are using? To sqeeze 60 channels into a DSL line is quite a feat (since you can STILL use DSL at the same time), but feasible

      It's not compressed.

      Only the Current channel is streamed.

  96. Lot o' Life in Old Wires by Sandlund · · Score: 1

    This doesn't surprise me, really. I interviewed Mark Allen of Tut Systems -- the developers of the home phone networking technology now under the HPNA standard. He feels that copper in the home will eventually support home networks of 1 Gbps -- not shabby.

    Given that the phone company controls the entire length of the copper run to your home, they should be able to boost this stuff up to support 60 channels or more -- regardless of whether it's worth watching or not.

  97. Yeah, right. by jo42 · · Score: 2
    > users get 60 channels along with their DSL and phone line.

    Until they tell you that you are too far away from the CO.

    Pffft!

  98. *shudder* Bad idea by bucky0 · · Score: 1

    They had better get some better tech support than @home, or my local phone company. me:Hi, I was wanting to tell you guys that my gateway is messed up, I can traceroute as far as the gateway, but I cant get to any sites beyond that. @home tech:Yeah, there's an issue with the mailservers right now, we have people on it. Thanks for calling @home *click* me:...
    -Bucky
    The few, the proud, the conservative.

    --

    -Bucky
  99. Re:Ma Bell by FreeMath · · Score: 1

    In Georgia, where AT&T took over mediaOne, I have noticed periodic "pauses" in the service. And the customer service isn't as friendly.

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    This sig intentionally left blank.
  100. Re: Telus by litui · · Score: 1

    I know the Novus solution is fiber-based, but as I recall, there was a rumour about Telus releasing a phone-line based cable/pay per view system sometime in the next year or so.

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    I send you this message in order to have your advice.
  101. and on a side... by PiterPan · · Score: 1

    ...I'd like an order of chicken fried rice. Yes, everything together. I HATE watching my "Web Site" 6:30pm show without food.

    Thank you.

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    --

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    On scale from -14 to 56 this post is '-15, Nonexistent'
  102. Ma Bell I don't know, but RR... by Ruger · · Score: 1

    ...provides mucho speed in my area.

    Unfortunately, your results may vary significantly. I get connection speeds of 3-4 Mbps and frequently hit download speeds of 200-300 Kbps. I'm not certain about the uphill rate.

    Ruger
  103. Not enough channels by AlgUSF · · Score: 1

    I get digital cable and get roughly 200 Basic/Premium channels, plus like a million pay per view channels. If GTE (Verizon) could offer that kind of service, I would switch to it instantly. Time Warner's service is horrible, and now that AOL has merged with them it will probably get worse. But I guess now that GTE, and all of them merged I guess their service is going to get worse too (like 1 month for DSL).

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    I want my rights back. I was actually using them when our government stole them after 9/11.
  104. Im waiting for the day TV is dead by Squarewav · · Score: 1

    I rarely watch tv anymore why? theres nothing on when I want to watch it, ether a: I forget that its on or b: Im at work. Hopefully sometime in the not to distant futre(10years?) I'll be able to just click a link to watch my fav shows. Damn It im tired of missing SouthPark or DBZ , Ya I know I could just set-up my vcr, but im lazy damn it ;)
    I guess the "web" has spoiled me, Ive grown used to "what I want when I want", too bad I cant get broadband :(

  105. Also in UK by Martin+Spamer · · Score: 1

    I laughed when I read this little piece of "breaking news"... This kinda technology has been in use for over a year in Moncton, New Brunswick CANADA... yeah that's right... Canada... A similar system has been available to consumers from Kingston Communications in UK, for year (it trialled for nearly two years before that). http://www.kingston-comms.co.uk http://www.kingston-vision.co.uk (flash)

  106. COAX Telephone by hullbert · · Score: 1

    Not sure about y'all but the Telephone lines to my house are Coax and only from there does it turn into twisted pair. I have DSL but really don't subcribe to that much TV. Star Trek is good enough...

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    if you have to read this your really bored!
  107. Re:GOATSE.CX REDIRECT - dont click the link by Sheeple+Police · · Score: 1

    Uh, have you tried clicking the link? It's a valid one

    --

    Information is the catalyst for revolution
  108. Stupid Question by MasterOfDisaster · · Score: 1

    Forgive me if this is a stupid question, but, how exactly they squeeze all that data on a little phone line?
    With DSL, I can see the speed gain by cutting out the D/A conversion, but...that's about as far as my poor little brain could take me.
    so, how do you get a digital and an analog signal donwn the same line?

    --
    The opinions in this post are ficticious. Any similarity to actual opinions, real or imagined, is purely coincidental.
  109. This would be nice by Aurelius42 · · Score: 1

    I think that this would be a great service, and a way to even out the playing field, so to speak. Right now, you can get voice services over coax. Now the phone companies can expand into delivering video over coppper.

    It would be even nicer if the subscriber could even go so far as to choose the channels they received :)

  110. A lot of people were wondering the specs... by Aurelius42 · · Score: 1

    of the transceiver. Some of it's marketing fluff, but there are SOME nice details near the bottom, at mPhase's FAQ Page. (They call their device the Traverser)

    HTH

  111. A great hobby by __aakpxi9117 · · Score: 1

    And when this gets to be a popular thing to do, those of us here in the desert will have a new hobby... Sitting around outside in the shade, watching as the phonelines slowly melt away.

  112. Here's your technical info! by yerts · · Score: 1

    from http://www.mphasetech.com/, mPhase is the first company to develop a product with the ability to provide up to 400 channels of digital television, high-speed Internet access and voice service, all delivered simultaneously over the installed twisted-pair copper infrastructure. mPhase offers a specific type of DSL, called RADSL (Rate Adaptive Digital Subscriber Line), allowing high speed data transmissions at speeds 200 times faster than 28.8K and 50 times faster than ISDN connections...

    Dont count on CNN to bring you the real details! there is plenty of info on the site explaining the how it all works.

    I do understand that this technology has been around for a few years but mphase has been working with gatech to perfect it. I have seen it and it is really nice.

    btw, this system is really only in its first stages of rollout. the phone company in hartwell is just the first test of the mphase system.
    And for all you geeks out there, the system runs on top of redhat. :)

  113. Fibre vs. copper by Big+Brass+Balls · · Score: 1

    I stand corrected.

    --

    --
    Do I play Hockey?
    What you say!!
  114. Wow... by TDScott · · Score: 5

    Introducing...

    The Verizon TV Service!

    • Guaranteed 41% uptime!
    • It'll always cut out at the important bits of the story!
    • Why not upgrade to our plus service - we'll automatically download programme schedules for you, to make sure the VerizonBox(TM) always cuts out at the right moment!

    Sorry. Sarcasm overload here. Although quite how far into the realms of fantasy I am I'm not sure...

  115. Ma Bell by Isosceles+Triangle · · Score: 5

    If it takes 3 months to install like my DSL did, I don't want it.

  116. But what about copyright protection? by KupekKupoppo · · Score: 1

    Ok, so we might be overlooking what could be the biggest part of the deal--if TV were distributed in this format in the future, working in conjunction with DSL equipment, is it going to be more likely or less likely to be induplicable?

    I want to be able to tape/record/save my shows. Does this "set-top box" lend itself to "creative design" like the Tivo did? If so...happiness!

    -k.

  117. IP vs. MPEG Transport by dachshund · · Score: 1

    The one thing I really like about this system is that they seem to be doing everything over IP. Please correct me if I'm wrong. Cable companies traditionally use MPEG transport to move their digital video signals; when they want to send IP, they wrap the IP up inside MPEG TS packets. The big advantage of using IP-for-everything is that it's much easier to route, making on-demand services easier to implement-- and I think this is the future of cable TV.

  118. Re:I wonder (Word DOC exchange) ... by bladeohlsson · · Score: 1

    What do you mean? Is there info about previous versions of a DOC contained from edited DOC files that can be looked at? How is this done. Sounds interesting. blade

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    http://www.ohlssonvox.com
  119. Cable and DSL and Phone services oh my! by CoBoLwArRiOr · · Score: 3

    I wonder what kind of competition will open up in the cable TV market, especially if the phone companies decide to provide their own channels rather than teaming with a local cable company. Or, what if the local cable companies embrace this technology and begin to offer up phone services? The possibilities are mind boggling. (and yes, I know Time Warner is already in the telecom and cable business).

    -=-=-=-=-=-=-
    The COBOL Warrior

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    -=-=-=-=-=-=-
    The COBOL Warrior
    "COBOL's Not dead, it's just underground"
  120. KC by mattsmigs · · Score: 1

    Kingston Communications is testing a technology like this that allows tv over an ADSL line, the "coming soon" page is at kitv.co.uk

  121. I wonder (Word DOC exchange) ... by Athanasius · · Score: 1

    To quote the article:

    Attorney Walter Gordon routinely exchanges hefty word processing documents with other lawyers over the Internet, with each side making changes.

    I wonder what juicy snippets are in those documents by the end, given how Word likes to retain bits of old revisions...

  122. VDSL by imabmf · · Score: 1

    Actually they have had this technology in Phoenix for about a year. Only problem is just about NOBODY can get. USWEST was offering a special way back when...YOu get your phone line, 256kb DSL and what was a 60 channel (basic) cable for about 70 bucks a month. And they were throwing in the TV set top box. Haven't heard much about it since it first came out, and I think only one Central Office in phoenix had the necessary equipment installed to offer this service.

  123. 20 Bucks a Month gets you Vibe Vision by jandow · · Score: 1

    MTT will offer it to persons living within 2 klicks of the Sackville Street switch, the North Street switch, and the Rockingham switch. The basic rate will be 20 bucks a month, and it goes on your phone bill. For a demonstration, go to the Downeast in the Maritime Center. The best bit is that even with the Vibe, I'm still getting 281 KByte/s downloads, thanks to a bit of software I discovered on versiontracker.

  124. Wired Video by chimo · · Score: 1

    Heres a more direct reference to this existing technology in Broadcast Engineering. http://www.broadcastengineering.com/html/HomeSet1. htm

  125. Cable phone by yournic · · Score: 1

    dont get cable phone, one of my friends got 6 free months of it. they put you into clusters and the more ammount of people on the line the quality degrades or you dont get any dial tone at all!