IEEE - Broadband over Power Lines Standard released
Another piece of very good news - consumers (especially ones in the rural areas) may benefit from this if the utility companies or municipalities have their way - increase in competition to Telcos, ISP's and CableCos likely. 
PISCATAWAY, N.J.: IEEE has published its standard for  Broadband over Power Lines. The Institute of Electrical and Electronics  Engineers finalized BPL 1901TM in December and has made them available for  purchase. The controversial Internet access technology has been around for  several years, but the absence of an IEEE standard has been but one hindrance to  its wider adoption. 
With BPL, merely plugging a browser-equipped  computer into a wall outlet yields high-speed Internet access. 1901-compliant  local area networks are said to support data rates of more than 500 Mbps, and  first- and last-mile ranges of 1,500 meters. The technology scheme allows for  the transmission of data over standard AC power lines of any voltage, at  frequencies less than 100 MHz. 
The Federal Communications Commission  adopted rules for BPL in 2004, setting off a firestorm of objection from ham  radio operators. The American Radio Relay League, representing hams, contended that  BPL interfered with their operations, as well as short-wave and low-band VHF  communications.
The FCC in 2006 reaffirmed its rules, denying ARRL requests to prohibit BPL  pending further study. The organization sued, and in April 2008, a federal court  ordered the commission to provide BPL emissions studies it had  previously redacted. Those documents were released July 17, 2009, along with a  Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking. The ARRL continues to  fight it. 
The League filed a complaint against BPL provider IBEC Inc.,  on behalf of members in several communities. The group contends that IBEC’s BPL  systems in Lovingston and Fairfield, Va.; Somerset, Pa., and Martinsville, Ind.  are creating “ongoing harmful interference,” and violations of current FCC  rules. 
“ARRL respectfully requests that the commission initiate  immediately an enforcement proceeding regarding these PBL systems and cause them  to cease operation until such time as they are each in full compliance with the  commission’s rules,” the group’s Dec. 29, 2010 filing states. 
Part of the FCC’s intention in  facilitating BPL was to help small and rural communities deploy high-speed  Internet access services. Manassas, Va., while not exactly rural nor small but  rather a tony suburb of Washington, D.C., did the first wide-scale launch of BPL  in 2005. Ten Mbps service was just $25 a month, but just 600 or so residents and  business signed up. City officials pulled the plug last April. In comments filed  with the FCC, James Whedbee says BPL’s abandonment in Manassas demonstrates the  technology is “obsolete.” 
“If BPL is allowed to exist at all the in the  aftermath of these proceedings, the commission should adopt the ARRL’s more  stringent regulations,” he wrote. “However, even the commission’s watered-down proposal  is better than allowing BPL to continue as it does now. 


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