NETWORK OVER BROADBAND IS CONNECTION ALTERNATIVE
So
there I was with my DirecTV DVR in the den and my computer located
in my office at the other side of the house. Normally this wouldn't
be a cause for concern because up to now, my TV had nothing to do
with the computer.
But I really should have known better because I kind of knew that
one day my TV equipment would require something that was
computer-related. It turns out that my TV system or more
specifically, the DirecTV DVR hooked into my TV now needed a way to
link up to the Internet and I had no way to get it there. But let me
go back a few days and tell you what happened.
DirecTV lets you get television programming via one of those little
satellite dishes. The latest box from them offers many cutting-edge
services like a slew of high-definition (HD) stations broadcasting
HD movies and television shows. Their latest box has a built-in HD
Digital Video Recorder
(DVR) that lets you record up to two different stations while
watching a recorded show all at the same time. Believe it or not,
this scenario comes up a lot more than you would think. And while
they also offer Pay-per-view shows, all of their programming is
available on their schedule. Of course you can time-shift the
programming by recording things onto the DVR so you can watch them
at a later time. But that's still on their scheduled time of shows.
But now DirecTV has introduced Video On Demand (VOD) where you can
choose from a growing library of movies, TV shows and other
programming and you can begin playing them at any time you want to
see them. The difference is that these shows aren't delivered down
over the satellite. They are delivered to your HD DVR via the
Internet. Oops. I have no Internet outlet in my TV room. And now
let's fast forward to the solution.
A wireless solution can't work simply because the DirecTV box
currently has no way to setup a Wi-Fi network. All that's there is
an Ethernet connection for a very long cable to my computer in the
other room (unacceptable).
Fortunately, Netgear offers a way to use a home's existing
electrical wiring. Their "Networking over Powerline" model HDXB111
consists of two little transceiver boxes that both plug into your
homes electrical outlets.
In my case, I plugged one into the AC outlet next to my computer's
router and the other one into the electrical outlet next to my TV
set. I then plugged an Ethernet cable from the HDXB111 into the
computer's router and another Ethernet cable from the DirecTV HD DVR
to the other HDXB111. That's it. A bright LED indicator on both of
the HDXB111 units signified that they had connected to each other
via the electrical wiring and the connection from my computer's
router to the DirecTV unit had been made. Problem solved!
Netgear's HDXB111 offers one extra solution that I have not seen in
similar devices. Networking over Powerline devices require that you
plug them directly into the wall's AC outlet. For technical reasons
I won't go into here, just know that you cannot plug them into any
kind of power strip or surge suppressor that usually offer several
AC plugs. Because of that limitation, you had to give up one of the
two precious outlets usually found in an AC wall outlet. But the
HDXB111 overcomes this limitation by offering its own pass-thru
female AC outlet. In other words, you get the one it uses back. This
is a VERY nice touch. The other nice thing this newest device offers
is a faster speed. 200 megabits per second is more than capable of
handling the video content coming from the DirecTV service.
So there you have it. Networking over Powerline offers yet another
Internet delivery alternative to Wireless and direct-connection.
Netgear's HDXB111 is truly that missing link you've been looking
for.
The HDXB111 sells for around $199.
www.netgear.com
| Craig Crossman is
a McClatchy-Tribune newspaper columnist writing about computers and
technology. He also hosts the nation's longest running nationally syndicated radio talk show on
computers and technology, Computer America, heard on both the Business TalkRadio
Network® and the Lifestyle TalkRadio Network®, weeknights at 10PM Eastern
time. Visit his website at http://www.computeramerica.com |
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