A new home networking standard promises to link devices over power lines,
co-axial cables and telephone wiring at speeds high enough to deliver
high-definition video to any room in the house.
The standard, currently known as
G.hn,
has just passed the first phase of ratification by the
International
Telecommunications Union (ITU), and silicon based on it could appear in
consumer products by 2010.
While the standard is being defined by the ITU, it will be promoted by the
HomeGrid
Forum, a group of vendors that currently includes Intel, Infineon, Panasonic
and Texas Instruments.
Matthew Theall, technology strategist at Intel's Digital Home group and
president of the HomeGrid Forum, said that G.hn should allow data rates up to
400Mbit/s over co-axial cables, up to 200Mbit/s over power lines, and somewhere
between the two over phone cabling.
"What's unique is that a single PHY and MAC can run over three different
wires at the same time," he said, adding that it would be possible for devices
connected to one type of cabling to communicate with others connected to a
different type.
The HomeGrid Forum foresees scenarios such as a digital video recorder that
can stream HDTV video to players anywhere in the house over the mains wiring.
However, chips supporting the standard might also be built into computers,
set-top boxes, residential gateways, audio systems, TVs or anything else that
might need a network connection.
"In the future, phones might integrate the chipset so you can plug your phone
into the wall and make IP calls over the power line," said Theall.
But the technology still has some way to go. ITU recommendation G.9960 cove
rs only the PHY, or physical interface, specifications and is now in an approval
process that is expected to lead to full ratification early in 2009. Work is
still continuing on the MAC layer, which controls access to the network.
The HomeGrid Forum hopes to have a full specification by September 2009,
which will allow chip makers to have transceivers ready for the first half of
2010, and products in retail later the same year if all goes well.
Theall said that higher level protocols, which ensure that devices can
recognise each other and communicate, have yet to be considered within the
standard. "It may be left up to the individual vendor to define these. Our focus
is on the MAC at the moment," he said.
Cost is another unknown. Theall expected the transceiver chips to add only a
small incremental cost to devices, but conceded that it was difficult to put a
precise figure on it at this stage.
Even the brand name has yet to be decided, as G.hn is just a placeholder
until the HomeGrid Forum can come up with something catchier.
Theall declined to say whether Intel will produce its own silicon or devices
based on the standard, but said that the company believes the technology will be
beneficial in the consumer electronics industry.
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