Everythings Connected Yes, But How?
Everything's connected, yes. But how?
Published: April 17, 2005, 6:00 AM PDT
By Eric A. Taub
The New York Times
Consumer technology seers say they think they have a good idea about the
home of
the future. It will be a place where photos, television shows, movies and
music will
be stored centrally and available in any room on demand.
It is called the
connected home
, where television sets, digital video recorders, DVD and music players and
computers
are all tied together. But an important question must be answered before the
connected
home becomes a reality: How will everything actually be connected?
A number of electronics companies and industry groups are working to answer
that
question, developing standards for connecting home entertainment devices.
Consumers who have created a small home computer network know of a few
solutions
that at first glance seem like candidates, like
Ethernet
cables and wireless.
But while tying together two or three computers to share an Internet
connection and
swap the occasional music or photo file is one thing, a home entertainment
network
can be another thing entirely. It can involve many more gadgets: television
sets
in the family room, kitchen and bedrooms; cable boxes; satellite TV
receivers; DVD
and audio players in the den; amplifiers and speakers scattered throughout
the house;
and one or more computers. And multimedia files like high-definition video
or movies
can be enormous, requiring lots of bandwidth.
Running Ethernet wire throughout a house to connect so many devices can be
very expensive,
particularly in an older home. And current versions of home wireless
technology are
not good contenders for home entertainment. Signals can be erratic,
depending on
the time of day, distance from the router and factors like interference from
other
home appliances. Move a wireless television like Sony's LocationFree model
around
the house, and watch the picture come and go.
So the ideal solution for the connected home would seem to be to find some
wiring
already in the house that digital data could share. Fortunately, most homes
already
have electrical wiring and coaxial cable.
Baby boomers may recall that a home's electrical wiring has been called into
alternative
service previously. In the 1970s, various companies sold devices with such
names
as the Little Wonder TV Antenna. Plug it into the wall, and it promised to
turn a
home's wiring into "a giant TV antenna," forever ridding the set of ghosts
and snow.
Unlike those novelty items, today's radically different technology actually
works.
Companies like
NetGear
already sell products that extend wireless signals by transmitting them
through
electrical wiring to other rooms. To pick up the signal, users plug a
network interface
box into an electrical outlet.
The technology uses a standard called HomePlug 1.0, developed by an industry
group
called the HomePlug Powerline Alliance. The group hopes an advanced version
of that
standard, HomePlug AV, will become an industry standard for
home-entertainment networks.
Backed by companies like Comcast, EchoStar and RadioShack, the group is
designing
its HomePlug AV standard to reliably carry 150 megabits of data a second
over home
electrical wiring. A high-definition video stream uses about 24 megabits a
second,
so the standard should provide enough capacity to simultaneously send
multiple streams
of HD video from room to room.
Not everyone thinks the HomePlug approach is such a great idea. Another
group of
semiconductor and electronics companies, including D-Link, Motorola,
Panasonic and
Thomson, wants to use existing coaxial cable, now used for cable TV, as the
network
link. Many homes already have coax going to at least several rooms.
Last week, the
Multimedia Over Coax Alliance
announced that it had successfully tested the technology in more than 200
homes,
and that it was able to deliver data at a rate of 100 megabits a second in
95 percent
of the wall outlets it tested.
The 5 percent that did not achieve that rate have problems like deteriorated
cable
and "are easily fixable," said Ladd Wardani,
president of the group. "In the worst case, we'd just have to run another
coax cable,"
he said. But if that happened with power lines, "you'd need an electrician
to fix
it."
Wardani also argued that coax cables were not subject to line interference
from other
devices, as the technology operates in a different frequency range.
HomePlug proponents naturally disagree with such conclusions. Various
error-correcting
technologies eliminate problems like noise, according to Oleg Logvinov,
president
of the group.
Logvinov said that the coaxial cable approach had problems. Because many
consumers
use cable TV splitters, coax will not be easily suitable for two-way
communications,
he said.
"The fundamental issue is, what is the convenience factor?" Logvinov said.
"Where
I would place my LCD TV is not necessarily where I would have a coax
outlet."
Consumer electronics companies continue to hedge their bets, supporting
either multiple
connectivity approaches or none at all.
Panasonic, a former member of the HomePlug Alliance, has left the group;
together
with Sony and Mitsubishi it has created the CE-Powerline Communications
Alliance,
which advocates another version of power line technology. HomePlug's
specification
does not adequately address interference issues, according to Paul Liao,
Panasonic
North America's chief technology officer.
Yet at the same time, Panasonic is also working with the coaxial cable
group. Its
partners, Sony and Mitsubishi, continue as members of HomePlug.
And Sharp, while also a member of the HomePlug Alliance, "is in no way
committed
to one technology or organization," said Deepak Ayyagari, principal
scientist with
Sharp Laboratories.
No matter how ubiquitous coax or electrical outlets may be in a house, there
will
always be some place in a room that does not have easy access to either. All
too
often, that is just where someone will want to put a new
flat-panel TV
.
To tackle such problems, a new short-range, high-data-rate wireless
technology is
being developed; proponents of both coax and home wiring see it as a natural
complement
to their own hard-wired schemes.
Known as
ultrawideband
, or UWB, this new wireless technology promises to deliver data at 480
megabits a
second at distances up to 30 feet. While the range is too short for wireless
networks,
it could be ideal to provide the last few feet of connectivity needed for
TVs and
other consumer electronics devices that need to be placed a few feet away
from an
electrical or coax outlet.
"HomePlug and UWB can be a remarkable marriage," Logvinov said. He envisions
a day
when ultrawideband is used to beam a television program guide to a handheld
organizer,
while the shows themselves are sent via power lines.
Products using these three technologies will begin to appear this year or in
2006.
At first, interface devices will be sold, small units that plug into an
electrical
or cable outlet, and then transmit their signal to a television or other
device through
an Ethernet cable or other means.
Only later will chips and other hardware using these standards be
incorporated in
products like television sets and DVD players.
The cost may be low enough that all three standards could be incorporated in
a single
product, letting the market decide which ones to adopt.
"There will be a place for all of this stuff," said Liao of Panasonic. "You
won't
need it all, but it will become cheap enough to get it all."