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Tenvera brings gigabit per second optical fiber to home networks Toni McConnel Franlin, Tenn. - Tenvera's will debut a fiber optic cable network system design to replace the copper wire based network schemes now in use in home network systems. Called System 5, Brent Ware, CEO of Tenvera said the new offering is that company’s answer to the inevitable problem that copper wiring cannot keep up with current and future broadband demands to power a home with office systems, media servers and gaming equipment. He said System 5 is based on using the unlimited bandwidth offered by fiber optic strands built into the walls of homes and commercial buildings that will increase available bandwidth to 1 Gigabits and beyond. “Throughout the world, especially in the United States, Asia and Europe, homeowners are continuing to add new electronic devices in their homes at increasingly accelerating rates,” said Ware. “While fiber optics ‘super highways’ started to be built years ago and are being finished out by forward thinking communities today, the fiber optic "off ramps" built straight into the homes are just now available.” The fiber optic system the company has designed, he said, provides almost 100 times more bandwidth power than is available in most homes today that are wired with copper. Initially, the company is targeting creators of cutting edge technology, real estate developers and consumers of high tech gaming and home offices to drive demand. "Five years ago dial-up was OK, today it's not. Two years from now the speed of broadband is going to be lightening fast compared to anything available up until now," Ware said. “The rest of the world is leaving us in the dust. Soon, consumers will demand speeds at 1 Gigabits and beyond," said Tim Akers, COO of Tenvera. To learn more, go to www.tenvera.com. For more information about topics, issues and technologies mentioned in this story go to the flashing icon in the upper left corner on any page or go to the iAppliance Web Views page and call up the associatively-linked Java/XML-based Web map of the iApplianceWeb site. |
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