YURI KAGEYAMA
AP Business 

TOKYO - The common electric socket will serve as your home's connection to
broadband with a new chip developed by Matsushita Electric Industrial Co. -
doing away with all the Ethernet cables or the hassle of hooking up to a
wireless network device.

Products are still being developed, but gadgets embedded with the chip from
the Japanese manufacturer of Panasonic products can hook up to a broadband
network by plugging into the common electrical outlet, company officials
said Thursday.

That's because the Osaka-based company has come up with technology to use
electric wiring in the home to relay not just electricity but also data.

The technology has been around for some time - including in the United
States - but Matsushita's system is unique in that it delivers fast-speed
broadband information at up to 170 megabits per second, which is faster than
Ethernet.

The advantage is that the lowly electric socket is everywhere. Right now, a
broadband outlet still isn't usually available in every room, even in homes
that have broadband connections.

In the future home envisioned by Matsushita, people will be able to download
and watch high-definition movies in any room of the house that has an
outlet.

Attach a special device made by Matsushita into a socket and all you have to
do is plug your TV or other gadgets into a socket for instant connection to
broadband, which allows for faster transmission of online information than
dial-up telephone connections.

Matsushita hopes to eventually sell refrigerators, TVs and other products
with the chip already installed.

A network-connected refrigerator may allow users to connect from a mobile
phone or laptop to check whether you're low on eggs, for example. Or you may
want to turn gadgets off or on, such as your washing machine or
air-conditioner, from outside the home.

But for now, an adaptor when plugged into an outlet will allow gadgets with
Ethernet connections - even those without the Matsushita chip - to receive
broadband.

Matsushita official Tomiya Miyazaki said that even homes with optical fiber
connections don't have broadband outlets in every room, and people are tired
of setting up gadgets with their home wireless LAN device.

"Our goal is to have every gadget plugged in this way so that people don't
have to even think about connecting it to broadband," he said.

Samples of the technology are being made available to companies, including
other Japanese electronics makers, that may wish to use it for their
products, Matsushita officials said. A demonstration of the technology will
be on show at the CEATEC exhibition that showcases electronic technology,
opening near Tokyo next month.

Acceptance of the technology is more likely in Europe and the United States
because of stricter regulations over power line use in Japan, according to
Matsushita. The company is in talks with the Japanese government to have
regulations eased.

Gregory S. Williams
[EMAIL PROTECTED]



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