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InternetNews January 28, 2004 Vikki Lipset |
Alliance to Publish UWB Standard The Multiband-OFDM Alliance, which is comprised of more than 50 companies including Texas Instruments, Intel and Samsung Electronics, announced Tuesday that it will establish a formal Special Interest Group to promote ultrawideband technology. |
InternetNews February 18, 2004 Vikki Lipset |
Intel Backs UWB for Wireless USB The chipmaker is among the members of a new industry group that will create a wireless USB protocol based on ultrawideband technology. |
InternetNews May 6, 2004 Sean Michael Kerner |
Is UWB Spec Spat Over? WiMedia Alliance throws its support behind one of two competing ultra wideband specifications. |
InternetNews March 3, 2005 Eric Griffith |
Ultrawideband Groups Merge Groups join forces to push new wireless interface standards. |
Home Toys October 2003 Kurt Sherf |
The Market For Ultra-Wideband Solutions We readily acknowledge the challenges inherent in forecasting a networking solution as broadly-positioned as UWB. However, we simultaneously would caution against the over-hype that has been associated with previous "revolutionary" technologies. |
InternetNews May 2, 2005 Jeff Goldman |
Microsoft Joins WiMedia Microsoft has tossed their backing behind ultrawideband contender WiMedia Alliance. |
InternetNews May 4, 2005 Michael Singer |
Bluetooth, UWB Groups Converge Members of the Bluetooth Special Interest Group said they will consult with Ultrawideband developers to evaluate how the two technologies can improve data transfers between PCs, phones and consumer electronics equipment. |
InternetNews August 9, 2004 Roy Mark |
FCC Approves First Commercial UWB Chipset Motorola semiconductor spinoff gets the nod to begin selling its ultra wide band (UWB) product to consumer electronics makers. |
InternetNews August 15, 2005 Jeff Goldman |
Wisair Gets FCC Approval Wisair is the first MultiBand OFDM-based member of the WiMedia Alliance to receive certification approval from the Federal Communications Commission. |
InternetNews September 7, 2004 Michael Singer |
Chip Universe Rotates on Intel's Axis At the start of its developer forum, chipmaker builds new relationships with support for specifications like SATA II, PCI-Express, and MultiBand OFDM. |
Entrepreneur May 2006 Mike Hogan |
The Near Future The next communications boom will seamlessly connect your devices. |
PC Magazine February 15, 2006 Sebastian Rupley |
HyperMegaSuper Wireless? Slick UWB products have arrived, but the jury's out on interoperability. |
InternetNews August 24, 2005 David Needle |
Intel Advances Faster Wireless USB Spec Intel is pushing its wireless USB initiative to faster data transfer rates that enable fewer cables for peripherals like printers, scanners, digital cameras and storage devices. |
InternetNews January 7, 2005 Michael Singer |
Wi-Fi Stays in Kodak's Picture At CES, Kodak intros digital camera with a Wi-Fi card as vendors promote push-button wireless networking. |
InternetNews March 29, 2006 David Needle |
Bluetooth Sig Selects WiMedia's UWB The Bluetooth Special Interest group announced its support of WiMedia's MB-OFDM instead of a competing UWB version, the direct-sequence UWB from the UWB Forum. |
PC Magazine October 27, 2004 Sebastian Rupley |
Will Ultra Wideband Survive? UWB has powerful backers--and competitors. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics December 2006 |
More Than 289 Million Ultra-Wideband Chipsets to Ship in 2010 PCs will be the initial and largest volume market for UWB wireless chipsets, with PC vendors shipping more than 125 million desktop and laptop PCs with UWB capability by 2010. |
IEEE Spectrum April 2006 Willie D. Jones |
No Strings Attached Starting this year, electronics manufacturers will introduce products that cut the cords tethering USB peripherals to their hosts. The confidence that comes from knowing exactly what you're getting when you see the letters USB may not hold for its wireless incarnation. Here's why. |
PC World October 30, 2001 Martyn Williams |
USB 2.0 Prepares to Battle for Your PC Networking standard is speedier and ready for the spotlight, but can it challenge the established IEEE 1394? |
InternetNews April 22, 2004 Michael Singer |
Intel Adds a Nook to the Digital Home The chipmaking giant invests $200 million in four companies specializing in ultra-wideband and other networking technologies. |
PC World June 2004 Tom Mainelli |
Ultrafast Wireless New wireless technology promises up to 480 mbps--but only at close range. |
PC Magazine May 30, 2007 Anne Louise Bannon |
Kiss Those Cables Goodbye? Organize your desk, remove clutter from your office, even stream video wirelessly! New technologies promise the moon, but when will they deliver? |
PC Magazine January 15, 2004 John C. Dvorak |
The Buzz Is Abuzz Department Ultrawideband could provide cheap wireless broadband... Ultra memory and much of the new flash memory are at least twice as fast at loading images in real-world tests... HD-DVD competes with Blu-ray Disc... |
Home Toys October 2002 Paul J. Marcik |
Ultra Wideband Could Be Here to Stay Potential commercial applications include distribution of wireless audio, video, and data over local area networks (LAN) for home, office, and boats. |
InternetNews October 20, 2005 Eric Griffith |
Bluetooth at UWB Data Rate Freescale Semiconductor has demoed what it says is the first instance of high-speed ultrawideband on a Bluetooth stack. |
PC Magazine September 16, 2003 |
Networking: What's Next Innovative standards, technologies, strategies, and products will push networking -- for the home as well as the enterprise -- forward. Here's a look at the changes in store. |
PC Magazine September 24, 2003 John C. Dvorak |
High-Speed Wireless Dept. While you've been sleeping, the IEEE and the Ultra Wide Band folks have been working on 802.15.3a. |
CIO November 1, 2002 Preston Gralla |
Beyond Broadband Wi-fi wireless networking may be all the rage today, but a broadband wireless standard known as ultrawideband (UWB) may one day become the technology that finally frees computers from wires and clears the way for easy, high-speed data synching. |