search technology reviews, news, features, group tests
Popular Searches:   video , dell , free
 |  Register
 |  Newsletters  | 
Sitemap  |  RSS
RSS
Thursday November 26, 2009 8:28 AM AEST
Skip Navigation LinksPC Authority > News > Broadband enters Nether-world
NEWS

Broadband enters Nether-world

by Staff writers  on May 18, 2005
Tags: Broadband | Gas | internet | Net | web
A US company has claimed "breakthrough" wireless last-mile technology to deliver broadband services via natural gas pipelines.

A US company has claimed "breakthrough" wireless last-mile technology to deliver broadband services via natural gas pipelines.

Nethercomm, a California-based broadband provider, claimed on its website to have pioneered a technology to deliver TV, phone and internet services through natural gas pipelines.

The wireless, last-mile, method -- dubbed Broadband-in-Gas (BiG) technology -- would provide "limitless bandwidth", the company said.

Anne Nunally, chief operating officer at Nethercomm, said in a statement that BiG would herald a new era of low-cost broadband.

"Our Broadband-in-Gas technology represents a completely new alternative to cable video, phone and data services," she said.

"We believe we are the only company with an Intellectual Property portfolio which addresses wireless broadband communication in natural gas pipelines."

Nethercomm had been "extremely tight-lipped" about BiG until its patent portfolio was ready to go, Nunally added.

Nethercomm was developing natural gas, broadband and consumer electronics partnerships to validate and certify BiG for use in existing natural gas pipelines, the company said.

The company said it introduced signals into the gas lines using existing neighbourhood network hubs and extracting data at end-user premises with end user-installed equipment that could use digital set-top boxes. BiG used Ultra Wideband technology, it added.

"This technology is designed to effectively multiply the current available bandwidth of cable television and all other broadband systems with data capacities exceeding 10 gigabits," Nethercomm said.

Nethercomm’s technology used spectrum buried in existing natural gas pipelines. The company claimed BiG would not suffer from interference or degradation of other wireless transmissions.

Joe Posewick, president of US-based natural gas infrastructures designer EN Engineering, said BiG might "revolutionise" natural gas distribution and transmission.

“These utilities could both increase profit and decrease cost to their customers with very little investment," Posewick said in a statement.

 

Email a Friend Email this
Print Page Print this
Tweet This Tweet this
Feedback Send us your tips


Ads by Google

Comments

Be the first to comment on this article.
Thoughts on this article? Add a comment below.
Login or register to submit a comment.
 

Top Stories

My life with Linux: Day 3 -  The daily ups and downs of switching to open source
Stuart Turton spends the third day of his one week odyssey with Linux, fighting Fedora monitor hassles, wishing for Ubuntu at work and discovers that forums can be a Linux user's new best friend.
 
Verified by Visa phishing attack spotted
Security experts warned today that the Verified by Visa online authentication scheme has become the latest lure used by phishers hoping to harvest personal information from unsuspecting shoppers..
 
Intel and AMD: Videos explain how grains of sand are used to create a silicon CPU
Intel has released a short animated video illustrating the process by which sand is turned into silicon and a CPU. But the over-simplicity has us leaning towards AMD's older and more interesting video
 


 
Intel
 
 
LogMeIn
 
 
Amazing Dell Coupons now available
 
Discover Apple