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Broadband Over Gas Lines — a Pipe Dream?

prostoalex writes, "USA Today says we might see some progress in broadband over gas pipes, as startup Nethercomm (warning: Flash site) is working on the technology to deliver broadband Internet over this medium using ultrawideband radio. According to the article: 'Broadband in Gas would require installation of an ultrawideband transmitter that's linked to an Internet backbone... at a gas company's network hub. A receiver would be placed at a customer's gas meter. Build-out costs are about $200 per household, Nethercomm says. By contrast, broadband over power lines costs about $600 per household, while phone and cable TV networks each cost well over $1,000 per home to build.'" The article ends on a downbeat note. The upcoming trials that Nethercomm touts are difficult to confirm: "We're intrigued by the technology, but we never got that far in our discussions," says a gas company spokeswoman. And the ultrawideband chip company that had been working with Nethercomm, Freescale Semiconductor, has turned its attention to other projects.

2 of 210 comments (clear)

  1. Good that they're finding other uses by Scareduck · · Score: 3, Interesting
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    Dog is my co-pilot.

  2. Re:It's a series of tubes! by coolgeek · · Score: 3, Interesting

    IIRC, the Gas Company around here (So. Cal.) has been replacing a lot of those tubes with this orange plastic-looking stuff. Something about it being more reliable when the earth shifts, as it tends to do around here. Don't think that's going to transmit a radio signal very well.

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    cat /dev/null >sig