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NEW YORK -- IBM Corp. is throwing its considerable weight behind an idea that seemed to have faded: broadband Internet access delivered over ordinary power lines.
The technology has been around for decades, and Electric ceiling heater
but most efforts to implement the idea on a broad scale have failed to live up to expectations.
Now, and Electric ceiling heater
with somewhat scaled-back goals, and Electric ceiling heater
improved technology, and Electric ceiling heater
and a dose of low-interest federal loans, and Electric ceiling heater
IBM is partnering with a small newcomer called International Broadband Electric Communications Inc. to try to make the idea work in rural communities that don't have other broadband options.
Their strategy is to sign up electric cooperatives that provide power to sparsely populated areas across the eastern United States. Rather than compete toe-to-toe with large, and Electric ceiling heater
entrenched cable or DSL providers, and Electric ceiling heater
International Broadband is looking for customers that have been largely left out of the shift to high-speed Internet.
Signing on IBM, and Electric ceiling heater
perhaps the highest-profile company to buy into the idea, and Electric ceiling heater
could juice a technology that has failed to make much of an imprint.
The technology is important but what's really important is this is a seminal moment in the delivery of broadband services to rural customers, and Electric ceiling heater
said Bill Moroney, and Electric ceiling heater
the head of the Utilities Telecom Council, and Electric ceiling heater
an industry trade group. Here's a beginning and really a great leap forward


He majored not in business or economics, but in chemical engineering.
He then went to the University of Illinois and got a masters and a PhD in the same field. As he approached the real world at the age of 25, he still wasnt sure of his direction and interviewed for faculty jobs at Syracuse and West Virginia universities. He finally decided to accept an offer to work in a chemical development operation at General Electric, writes Cohen.