Oooh, yeah. I forgot about X10! 

I once used an X10 control system
to turn a stirrer on and off under program control for an
electrochemical cell I was running for a month. Long story, unrelated to
Gnu Radio :-) 

On Thu, 23 Feb 2012 08:59:06 -0800, Hugh and Irene Pett
wrote: 

> Hi George,
> The problem of connecting electronics cheaply to
house wiring was implemented maybe 20 years ago in the X10 system, in
which simple controllers would turn lights etc. on and off. There are
inexpensive computer interfaces as well. Here is just one example of the
sort of device that could probably easily be hacked apart to expose the
line connection alone: 
>
http://www.aartech.ca/am466-pam02-x10-plug-in-appliance-module-3-pin.html
[4]
> 
> There are hundreds of these devices available, at prices from
-0. But they all send or receive signals over AC wiring.
> 
> Cheers!
>

> Hugh Pett
> 
> On 23/02/2012 6:46 AM, George Nychis wrote: 
> 
>>>
Maybe something a little more accessible from MAXIM:
>>> 
>>>
http://www.maxim-ic.com/products/powerline/ [1]
>>> 
>>> They have an
evaluation kit which might have some testpoints to
>>> connect up to a
USRP, or try to ship off samples through their 10/100
>>> ethernet
interface.
>> 
>> Thanks, Brian! 
>> 
>> I will poke around the max
series evaluation kits to see if there is something there that could
work out at a reasonable price.
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Links:
------
[1] http://www.maxim-ic.com/products/powerline/
[2]
mailto:Discuss-gnuradio@gnu.org
[3]
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[4]
http://www.aartech.ca/am466-pam02-x10-plug-in-appliance-module-3-pin.html
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