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The NoCat Wireless Access Point/Night Light

cascadefx writes "O'Reilly's Hacks page has a really great article about a wireless access point that was on display at the recent Emerging Technology Conference. The folks at NoCat.net rigged up a Siemens Speedstream series access point with a low power ultraviolet light to create a wireless lightbulb. Just screw it in place and combine powerline ethernet with a wireless network... and a light, to create a wireless lightbulb. Ubiquitous networking, here we come."

3 of 151 comments (clear)

  1. Great. More broadband noise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    Everybody who thinks that powerlines are a great way to run ethernet through your house forget that all of the wire is unshielded thereby creating a large antenna. This typically results in static noise on frequencies up to 80Mhz. I also wonder how hard it would be to just listen to the
    network and attach to it. I am still amazed that
    the FCC lets any of this trash through. If you
    are not convinced go here:
    http://www.arrl.org/tis/info/HTML/plc/

    And no this does not just affect amateur radio.
    Ever thought about radio astronomy
    http://www.qsl.net/jh5esm/PLC/isplc2003 /isplc2003a 7-4.pdf

  2. Re:I don't understand the point of this.... by Suidae · · Score: 4, Informative

    X10 is also extremely slow. Without data compression you can max out at less than 8 bytes per second;

    X10 transmits only during the zero crossing of the AC powerline. If memory serves its a 10kHz signal for 1mS. One bit every 1/60th of a second, less framing and retransmissions (X10 includes some redundancy to reduce errors). Effective data rate even with compression would probably be less than 4 bytes per second.

  3. Re:Great. More broadband noise by Ungrounded+Lightning · · Score: 4, Informative

    Everybody who thinks that powerlines are a great way to run ethernet through your house forget that all of the wire is unshielded thereby creating a large antenna. This typically results in static noise on frequencies up to 80Mhz.

    And that's NOTHING compared to the noise generated on the wiring by connected non-communication appliances.

    - Motors. (Especially brush-type, such as vacuum cleaners or hair driers.)
    - Switching-type light dimmers.
    - Arc lights (fluorescent, "neon" gas discharge tubes, vapor-capsule, etc.)
    - Welders.
    - Switching-regulators in electronic appliances.
    - DIODES in power supplies.
    - ANY load turning on or off.

    Heck: Even an incandescent bulb produces broad-spectrum audio-through-radio interference on the line - though nothing like what a defective bulb produces as it flickers. (And an old carbon-filiment lamp in a closet has been known to knock out radio reception for much of a city block.)

    Be prepared for a LOT of packet corruption - meaning a lot of packet loss plus enough that get past all the redundancy checks to corrupt the actual traffic - if you ever attempt to use a power line for network traffic.

    --
    Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way