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Fast Company February 2003 Alison Overholt |
Wireless for the Clueless Everything you need to know to get untethered, at home and on the road. |
PC Magazine November 24, 2004 John C. Dvorak |
The Wi-Fi Rip-Off The Internet is more like water than electricity and should be sold as such. Water doesn't have to be generated or "made." |
IEEE Spectrum May 2013 Mitchell Lazarus |
When Spectrum Auctions Fail For some microwave links, cooperation beats competition as a way to share the air |
Entrepreneur July 2003 Dayton & Worrell |
Wireless Wealth The Wi-Fi revolution is coming. Find out how your business can get in on the ground floor and rope in profits. |
BusinessWeek July 31, 2006 Mark Gimein |
WiFi Eyes the Empty Airwaves The white space - unused spectrum between TV channels - could be key to new wireless services, but big telcos say it's a threat |
PC World July 18, 2002 Emru Townsend |
How to Set Up Your Home Network Wired or wireless, getting connected is easier than ever. Follow our steps and you'll have your PCs talking to each other in no time. Article covers setting up a HomePNA 2.0, HomePlug, or 802.11b home network. |
Home Theater June 18, 2009 |
DTV Weak? Try Double Rescan Has your television reception survived the DTV transition not quite fully intact? Here are a few tips from the Federal Communications Commission, including one we haven't heard before. |
CFO March 17, 2003 |
Who/What/Wi-Fi Pay phone may soon find a new life as wireless-fidelity "hot spots." |
IEEE Spectrum July 2010 David Schneider |
Home-Built Radio Rules The FCC's treatment of home-built devices could stand an update |
Home Toys August 2002 Elsa Chan |
Networking Your Home Today: As Easy as Using Your Hair Dryer This article covers the many advantages of having a home network, what solutions are available, which solution is best for an average household, and, thanks to recent technological breakthroughs, just how quickly and easily a network can now be established or expanded. |
Home Toys August 2003 Peter Davis |
Try WiFi A look at what you need for wireless network in your home or office, the shortcomings, and the benefits. |
Macworld September 2003 Becky Waring |
AirPort Extreme Antennas Wireless throughput drops drastically as signal strength decreases, so the improved reception provided by antennas can increase throughput. If you need better AirPort Extreme range in a limited area, one of the Dr. Bott ExtendAir external antennas may be the perfect solution. |
Home Toys February 2004 Jim Reeber |
HomePlug AV: The consumer's network HomePlug AV is an easy-to-use, easy-to-install, home networking technology that offers up to 200Mbps -- enough bandwidth to cover all applications for the home, including multiple HDTV streams. |
Entrepreneur April 2005 Amanda C. Kooser |
Reaching Out Range-extending options for your Wi-Fi setup stretch your dollar to the max. |
Home Toys October 2003 Yuanzhe Cai |
Public Hot Spots: One Truth and Two Myths Independent start-ups and equipment vendors started the hot-spot movement as a means to challenge the dominance of telecom carriers. The current hot-spot market is undergoing a transition. The bottom-up movement continues, but top-down approaches from incumbent carriers are also emerging. |
IEEE Spectrum February 2009 Schneider & Ross |
Antennas for the New Airwaves This month's planned shutdown of analog broadcast TV in the United States will bring antenna technology back into the spotlight. |
T.H.E. Journal March 2008 Wendy Chretien |
Setting New Standards Changes are coming to the world of WiFi, where safer and speedier wins the race. |
InternetNews July 8, 2004 Colin C. Haley |
Linksys Extends its Wi-Fi Range Cisco's wireless home networking unit unveils new antennas to bolster range and signals. |
Inc. October 2004 Larry Olmsted |
Travel Tech New gizmos keep you or your business connected on the road: Power inverters and adapters... Cellphones for sale or rent... etc. |
Technology Research News November 17, 2004 Eric Smalley |
Nanotubes Tune in Light Carbon nanotubes can act as antennas, but instead of transmitting and receiving radio waves, antennas of their size pick up the nanoscale wavelengths of visible light. |