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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 January 21, 2004 Roy Mark |
Key Backing in Hand for Ultra Wideband The Bush administration is on record this week in support of the adoption of current Federal Communications Commission (FCC) ultra wideband (UWB) emission limits for all outdoor device applications. |
National Defense September 2010 Eric Beidel |
Breath Sensors Reveal the Enemy Behind a Wall From California comes a sensor that could locate the enemy through a wall or find a comrade trapped under the rubble of a building. |
Defense Update Issue 1, 2006 |
Unattended Ground Sensors After several decades of rather obscure awareness in military operations, the use of passive sensors for remote battlefield applications is becoming more popular... Ground surveillance sensors... Future combat systems... etc. |
IEEE Spectrum November 2005 Willie D. Jones |
No Place to Hide New through-the-wall radar devices that rely on ultrawideband, a fairly new technology known mainly as a promising high-speed, low-power radio communications transmission technique, are now available to municipalities and law enforcement agencies. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics May 2007 John Keller |
Harris RF Designers Expand Into Networked Sensors Applications Harris' RF Communications Division is making a strategic expansion into networked sensors applications to augment their state-of-the-art military radios that operate securely in bands ranging from HF to satellite communications. |
National Defense August 2009 Jason Jacks |
Device to Take Medical Readings From Outside Clothing A device has been developed to give first responders quicker medical readings of multiple disaster victims. |
National Defense January 2007 Tyrone C. Taylor |
Pentagon, First Responders Share Communications Needs The military and civilian emergency responder communities share an overlapping need for enhanced communication technologies. |
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... |
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. |
National Defense January 2012 Eric Beidel |
Inkjet Printers Prepare for War Researchers at the Georgia Institute of Technology have developed a prototype wireless sensor that can be printed on paper or similar material using standard inkjet technology. |
National Defense November 2009 Erwin, Jean & Magnuson |
Today's Fights Expose Technological Weak Spots Disruptive challenges, such as roadside bombs, combatants camouflaged as civilians, and insurgent camps that are undetectable by electronic sensors, have forced U.S. military leaders to search for new tactics and technologies. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics May 2009 |
New Avionics introduces all-plastic ice sensor for UAVs The Model 9732-UAV ice-detecting transducer probe solves the problem of conductive metallic interference with mission-critical radio antennas on UAVs and other small aircraft. |
National Defense May 2008 Stew Magnuson |
To Succeed, Soldiers `Need to See the Environment' Troops fighting in Iraq's cities often complain that they cannot see the enemy and need sensors that can penetrate walls, identify foes in pitch dark and locate buried explosives. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics November 2009 John Keller |
Multi-Sensor Fusion Hits the Mainstream Once considered as futuristic, difficult, and elusive, multi-sensor fusion is coming into its own as a standard approach of processing signals from a wide variety of sensors, and making sense of incomplete and sketchy sensor data. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics March 2010 John Keller |
Multisensor Designs and Increasing Resolutions Are Major Trends in Infrared and Other Electro-Optical Sensors Infrared (IR) and other electro-optical sensors will see major technological breakthroughs in sensitivity, resolution, and overall ability to help military forces see through fog, smoke, dust, and the darkness of night. |
National Defense March 2008 Stew Magnuson |
Tracking Personnel Inside Buildings: A Tough Problem to Solve The ability to know where your personnel are at all times is crucial in natural disasters. Unfortunately, it was one of the major weaknesses following 9/11. |
Chemistry World August 2006 David Walt |
Comment: Common Sense for Sensors Designing sensors for manufacturability must be performed at the outset rather than as an afterthought. Only when we develop such reproducible sensors will they become pervasive tools for improving our quality of life. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics December 2009 |
SATCOM RF Booster Amplifier Military Radio Communications Introduced by AR Modular RF The 50-watt auto-tuning, multi-band tactical RF amplifier can help soldiers maintain constant, reliable military radio communications in demanding environments. |
CFO August 1, 2005 John Edwards |
Sensors Working Overtime Wireless tracking devices are radically transforming how businesses monitor vital equipment. |
Technology Research News July 30, 2003 Kimberly Patch |
Eyes off, screen off Giving computers the ability to discern where you are looking means, among other possibilities, setting screens to go dormant when they don't have your attention. The trick to making it practical is keeping the energy-saving mechanism from using more energy than it saves. |
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. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics December 2006 |
LabVIEW Drivers for Wireless Sensor Networks National Instruments announced LabVIEW drivers for wireless sensor networks, giving engineers and scientists working with these devices the ability to fully integrate their wireless sensors into a graphical development environment. |