Bruised and shedding high-profile supporters, technology for sending
high-speed data over electrical wires to the home is at last stumbling to
market.
For years the idea has lurked as a potential competitor to alternatives like
DSL (digital subscriber line) and cable modems. Because electric lines are more ubiquitous than phone
lines, and far more common than cable TV connections, it has drawn
considerable--if intermittent--interest from big companies and policy-makers
around the world.
But the next year will be a critical one for the young technology, as it
struggles to achieve tangible technological and commercial results in an
environment where new high-tech ideas are having a hard time winning funding
and popular support.
"My view is that if (power-line data transmission) worked so well, there
would be a lot of companies getting into it," said Jeff Moore, senior
analyst for network services at Current Analysis, echoing many analysts'
skeptical wait-and-see attitude.
"Even if it did work, it would face an uphill battle" against more mature
technologies such as DSL, cable and satellite connections, Moore added.
After many fits and starts, customers in Europe will see commercial service
offered this year from at least two companies. This summer, U.S. customers will see their first full-scale beta test project in New York
along with Consolidated Edison (Con Ed) utility. Giants including Cisco
Systems and the Bechtel Group have signaled their growing support of the
technology in successful trials in Europe, the United States and Asia.
These long-awaited market signs come amid some bad omens, however.
Technology giant Siemens abandoned power-line development last week, citing
market and regulatory concerns. Another, far more speculative, company called Media Fusion, which once said it was testing a system that promised
practically unlimited bandwidth, has gone silent following the removal of its chief scientist and
founder.
An old idea, moving slowly
The idea of letting information piggyback inside power lines is an old one.
Power company employees have long used devices that tap the wires to send
voice messages short distances while working on the lines, for example.
The trouble has come in turning this into stable data transmissions that can
support modern Internet use. Many of the same network characteristics that
have made it possible to receive uninterrupted power supplies--outside of
California, at least--have turned out to interfere with data transmissions.
Nevertheless, development work done in several countries over the past few
years is finally finding its way out of labs and into actual electrical
grids. Depending on how it is implemented, it offers the possibility of
connections as fast or faster than cable modems or DSL, although--as with
cable systems--neighbors will have to share a line's available bandwidth.
The idea has pulled ahead in Europe, experts say, in part because
characteristics of electrical networks there make it technically easier to
send data. The projects there are finally bearing fruit.
Swiss company Ascom, working with German
utility group RWE, plans to bring close to 16,000 homes online over the next
year or so. Another utility-backed group called Oneline AG, which is working
with U.S. company Enikia for a home
networking component, has projected about 10,000 customers by the end of
2001.
However, the German activity has been tempered by last week's defection of Siemens,
one of the most high-profile developers of the technology.
A source close to Siemens' decision said the company drew back for several
reasons, including the slow pace of European standards development,
challenges from other patent holders in the technology, and the fact that
electronic radiation levels for the power-line transmissions had wound up
being higher than standards proposed in Germany.
Slower in the U.S.
In the United States, trial projects are still more restrained. A Brookline,
Mass., company called Ambient is working with New York's
biggest utility, among others, mapping power networks and testing early
stages of the technology. They, along with partners Cisco and Bechtel, hope
to launch the service commercially in 12 to 18 months, Chief Executive Mark
Isaacson said.
Cisco, however, perhaps remains the technology's largest supporter. That
company, which is creating data-routing technology for several projects, is
doing some independent development work to help push the technology forward,
but is still looking to the smaller companies for much of the advances.
"Cisco is very much behind power line," said Phil Hunt, one of the Net infrastructure
company's technology experts. "Our strategy involves some direct
action, and some less direct activity."
The most ambitious--and speculative--company in the market has all but
disappeared from the radar screen, however.
Dallas company Media Fusion won considerable press and attention from national policy-makers several years
ago pitching a version of
power-line transmission with near-unlimited bandwidth. The company
repeatedly said it had achieved support from small utilities, and was close
to a field test of a lab product that was already functioning.
But last month, the company announced that its former chief scientist, who
the company's banker had called a "Good Will Hunting" type of figure, had
been removed as chairman of the board and as an employee of the company. "We
knew that the best way to advance the technology was without Mr. (Luke)
Stewart at the helm," the company said in a statement.
Current Media Fusion executives declined repeated requests for an interview,
as did Stewart himself.
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