Home networking gets a jump start from new tech

Daily Newsletters

Sign up to ZDNet UK's daily newsletter.

NEWS
With an eye for the future, technology companies next week will tout new advances in home networking in hopes of taking ideas from the drawing board into the living room. At the Consumer Electronics Show, an electronics conference that starts Saturday in Las Vegas, new products from startups as well as some of consumer electronics' largest names will aim to charge the nascent industry for connecting PCs, printers and other electronic gadgets at home. Thomson Multimedia, which builds consumer electronics products under the RCA brand, is expected to announce plans to sell networking kits next month that let people connect PCs using existing power outlets in the home. Thomson, using technology developed by Novell spinoff Inari, will sell home networking kits that allow people to use their homes' internal electrical networks as a medium to share Net access, play video games, and enjoy movies and music throughout the house. Thomson will become one of the first companies to release home networking kits using electrical outlets, giving the fledgling technology, called "powerline", a much needed jump start, analysts say. The RCA brand -- long known in the world of consumer electronics -- could also help adoption. Powerline technology, which has taken years to develop, has lagged behind other home networking kits that have hit store shelves first, such as wireless and phone-line products. Such technology allows people to link PCs by plugging them into regular phone jacks. Thomson and other technology companies, including Intel, Motorola, 3Com and IBM spinoff Home Director, are expected to announce and demonstrate new home networking technologies at the technology conference next week. Home networking is still in its infancy, but analysts expect the market to take off in coming years as more consumers get high-speed Net access and want to link their computers, appliances and electronic devices, such as Web-surfing appliances, together. Most home networking products today are simple networking kits that allow people to connect multiple PCs so they can share a single Net connection, swap files, and share printers and other peripherals. "The kits that network PCs together are doing pretty well. People are buying them, so home networking is gaining momentum," said Yankee Group analyst Karuna Uppal. Ultimately, tech companies envision a future where every electronic device is connected, so people can turn on a stereo in the living room and send music to a PC in another room, while a computer in a bedroom could turn on the oven. To further that goal, tech companies such as Motorola and startups 2Wire and Coactive Networks will demonstrate more complex devices, called residential gateways, that will allow consumers to securely connect electronic devices -- such as PCs, appliances and security systems -- with their phone service and high-speed Net access. The residential gateways will support wireless, power-line and phone-line home networking standards. Analysts believe the residential gateways will be sold by service providers, such as cable operators, that want to offer phone services and other new features. "The residential gateway is the next major step -- [that] and new Internet appliances with home networking built into them," Uppal said. Thomson's new power-line home networking kit, expected in late February, is the first of many products the company plans to release to tap into the home networking market, a Thomson representative said. It could also be a potential financial boon for Inari, a 60-employee company that spun off from Novell in 1997. Inari, formerly called Intelogis, had previously released a power-line home networking kit and sold it directly to consumers. "RCA is a huge brand and depending on the price, they could drive huge volume [of sales] for Inari," Uppal said. Thomson and Inari's technology, however, may not be compatible with technology being created by a consortium of technology companies, which is trying to create an industry standard for power-line home networking. A consortium of about 60 companies that includes Cisco Systems, Intel, Hewlett-Packard, Panasonic and Sharp has been working to create a common way for electronic devices to communicate through the home electrical line. The group, called the HomePlug Powerline Alliance, recently chose a technology by little-known company Intellon as the basis of its standard. Inari declined to join the standards effort, choosing instead to support similar standards efforts in Europe and join with the Consumer Electronics Association (CEA), a group that includes Sony and Thomson. The HomePlug group expects to make final a power-line standard with data transfer rates of 10 megabits per second (mbps) by March, and the first products using the technology are expected in the summer. Intellon and other power-line networking companies, such as Enikia and Adaptive Networks, will demonstrate their technology at the Consumer Electronics Show. Thomson, which owns a 5 percent stake in Inari, uses Inari's technology that features data transfer speeds at about 2mbps. Inari is developing technology that runs at 10mbps and expects products using the faster speeds to ship by late 2001 or early 2002. Uppal said Thomson's support of Inari will help the young networking company compete against the HomePlug supporters. "That's a huge deal for them. They're not a part of HomePlug, and some people wrote them off because of that," she said. "They will be first to market and have a year jump on HomePlug products. And that puts them in good position." Inari executives believe it's important for the industry to select one power-line home networking standard for the technology to take off -- and they expect the industry to eventually settle on one standard. And representatives from HomePlug and the CEA this week said they are in discussions to work on a single standard. The standards fight is a nonissue right now because no products are yet available, Uppal said. When power-line standards are developed, analysts expect more consumer electronics companies to support the technology in their products. "Power line will happen, but it's more of a [late] 2001 or 2002 technology," she said. "The standards issue starts having meaning a year from now when you buy products using power line and plug them into the wall, and you buy two different ones that are incompatible." Following are some home networking technologies expected to be unveiled at the trade show:
  • Intel plans to announce new technology that allows consumers to simultaneously use wireless and phone-line networking kits on the same home network
  • Motorola will show off its new wireless cable modem and wireless residential gateway. Startup 2Wire will also release its wireless residential gateway, allowing laptop users, for example, to roam around the house and stay connected to the Net
  • Residential gateway maker Coactive Networks will announce new software and hardware that helps homeowners and businesses better manage energy costs by connecting the home's thermostat and light switches. Homeowners, for example, could turn on their appliances and lights remotely through mobile phones or computers at work. The products are being tested by utility companies in the United States, a Coactive representative said
  • IBM spinoff Home Director will demonstrate new software packages for its residential gateway. The new software will allow people to create more telephone lines within the home, stream music throughout the house, and view live shots of their home security cameras from any Net-enabled device.
Have your say instantly, and see what others have said. Click on the TalkBack button and go to the ZDNet News forum. Let the editors know what you think in the Mailroom. And read what others have said.

Post your comment

In order to post a comment you need to be registered and logged in.

You can also log in with Facebook. Log in or create your ZDNet UK account below

  • Login

Will not be displayed with your comment

By signing up for this service, you indicate that you agree to our Terms and Conditions and have read and understood our Privacy Policy. Questions about membership? Find the answers in the Community FAQ

Get ZDNet UK's daily newsletter

Enter your email address to sign up

ZDNet UK Live

TerryRK

Well it seems there is something a number of us agree on. Why is the Ubuntu Unity launcher so ugly? I thought perhaps it was something to do with...

4 hours ago by TerryRK on A tale of two distros: Ubuntu and Linux Mint
Freebies202

Duplicate comments are not made intentionally. Its very good to know that now you are keeping check on this problem because sometimes a commenter...

13 hours ago by Freebies202 on Microsoft fixes blog comments, speeds up blogs with open source
kevinmchapman

"the very significant number of users" and "many (most) of us" - you have no evidence for these statements. It is a fact that most users are saying...

21 hours ago by kevinmchapman on A tale of two distros: Ubuntu and Linux Mint
Marg Menzies Harrison

Another grammar faux pas is the improper use of "you". When sitting down down in a restaurant, for example, I get cringe when the waitress...

23 hours ago by Marg Menzies Harrison via Facebook on 10 flagrant grammar mistakes that make you look stupid
zdnetukuser

And NOW, folks, for Canonical's next trick... Kubuntu is late. Here's a pencil. Draw your own conclusions. cf.:...

23 hours ago by zdnetukuser on Linux Minterface
Moley

@kevinmchapman. The discussion here reflects the very significant number of users who really do like the traditional menu system and who wish to...

1 day ago by Moley on A tale of two distros: Ubuntu and Linux Mint
kevinmchapman

Er, no... It is an efficient means of finding the application/file/setting you need in one place. The icons are a simply a fallback for when you...

1 day ago by kevinmchapman on A tale of two distros: Ubuntu and Linux Mint
TerryRK

Isn't the provision of a text based search an admission by the developers that the mass of icons approach does not work? I don't need to use a...

1 day ago by TerryRK on A tale of two distros: Ubuntu and Linux Mint
kevinmchapman

"Unity and GNOME 3 both abandon the old text-based cascading menus in favour of a graphical icon-driven system." Point truly missed. Both use a...

1 day ago by kevinmchapman on A tale of two distros: Ubuntu and Linux Mint
TerryRK

whs001 - Thank you, I'm glad you liked the article. I absolutely agree with you on your first point. I should perhaps have made it clearer that...

1 day ago by TerryRK on A tale of two distros: Ubuntu and Linux Mint
Dennis Nilsson

If we allow corporate interest to dictate the way our government circumvents due process against foreign entities then we should accept the same...

1 day ago by Dennis Nilsson via Facebook on ACTA stumbles in Germany
GHar123

I totally dislike pirating of works, I fear that artists will be deterred from creating works if they think that they are going to get ripped off....

1 day ago by GHar123 on ACTA stumbles in Germany
JCB33

How dare film makers, artists or anybody that invests in creativity stop us pirating their works for free. I want to be able to walk into my local...

2 days ago by JCB33 on ACTA stumbles in Germany
Moley

@GrueMaster. I prefer horses for courses rather than one size fits all. I, and I suspect most other computer users, do not really wish to have...

2 days ago by Moley on A tale of two distros: Ubuntu and Linux Mint
greycynic

The product that scares me every time I have to use it is the Office 2007 version of Excel. The first bug that I found was applying the median...

2 days ago by greycynic on Ten flawed products that derail productivity
GrueMaster

Nice review and very informative. One thing I'd like to add (in reply to whs001's 1st question), the main reason to have the same interface from...

2 days ago by GrueMaster on A tale of two distros: Ubuntu and Linux Mint
Frederick Wrigley

I'be been using Mint 12 since the RC came out, and I am far more happy with the Cinnamon, the Mate, and, yes (with extensions), theGnome 3...

2 days ago by Frederick Wrigley via Facebook on A tale of two distros: Ubuntu and Linux Mint
bdantas

Excellent article. One small correction, though--although a fresh installation of Linux Mint 12 will, indeed, provide the user with a version of...

2 days ago by bdantas on A tale of two distros: Ubuntu and Linux Mint

In related news, the ISPs club together to get the members of the Home Affairs Select Committee (ya goofed on that part, ZDNet UK) copies of "The...

2 days ago by via Facebook on MPs urge ISPs to take down terrorist material

In related news, the ISPs club together to get the members of the Home Affairs Select Committee (ya goofed on that part, ZDNet UK) copies of "The...

2 days ago by via Facebook on MPs urge ISPs to take down terrorist material