Sounds like the typical situation where Electricians can pull the cable, but they have to bring in a "data" contractor to do the termination. If only the Electricians knew how simple it is to put in push-down CAT5 jacks!New high end homes in the UK are starting to get pre-wired with CAT5e but in most cases the builders don't terminate the cables, and the home owners don't know what to do with it, and as the ISP's don't as a rule send out Tech's unless things go wrong... it doesn't get used.
Tim,
before copper wire came in a twisted pair...
Tam
thiggins said:My impression is that IPTV is one of the forces behind powerline in Europe.
No not at all. The IPTV providers made the correct choice with powerline instead of WiFi IMHO. It's a lot easier to install, and it (almost) always works without a hitch. The connection is more stable and has more bandwidth. The only downside, it not being wireless, is not an issue at all with regards to IPTV, quite the contrary actually.thiggins said:So wireless is fast and reliable enough and reaches all the locations you need with sufficient bandwidth?
Brandon and Tamarin,
So wireless is fast and reliable enough and reaches all the locations you need with sufficient bandwidth?
Brandon and Tamarin,
So wireless is fast and reliable enough and reaches all the locations you need with sufficient bandwidth?
Despite all that, it can be a good alternative to banging your head against a wall trying to get wireless to reach a tough spot in a house. Will be interesting, though, to see whether the coax/MoCA adapters that are finally starting to come out make any better headway than powerline.
Powerline networking seems to be popular in Europe, but not so much in the U.S.
Why can't it get some love here?
Yes, US residential power service is usually 220 split into two 110V phases. Earlier power line products did need the "bridge". But current generation products are able to pick up the signal they need from EMF phase to phase coupling.I don't know about Europe but in the US most houses have power split into 2 "halves". So depending on where you want to use equipment you might have to put a bridge into the circuit panel to join the two halves.
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