Getting Familiar with Bluetooth 4.0 Low Energy

Getting Familiar with Bluetooth 4.0 Low Energy

Bluetooth 4.0, with the hallmark feature of Bluetooth low energy wireless technology, is ready to roll. The Bluetooth SIG formally adopted the radio and host layers of the specification, and opened qualification for new products in July of last year.
Free and Connected

Free and Connected

Samuel Morse and Alexander Graham Bell came up with inventions that wound up with the country and the world being connected by wires and cables. Guglielmo Marconi came up with a wrinkle that allowed information to be exchanged without the wires. Over the years, we have seen the proliferation of...
Defining the Future of Multi-Gigabit Wireless Communications

Defining the Future of Multi-Gigabit Wireless Communications

The WiGig specification utilizes the unlicensed 60 GHz band worldwide to provide data rates up to 7 Gbit/s. Based on the 802.11 standard, it includes native support for Wi-Fi over 60 GHz. Products with tri-band radios will be able to transparently switch among 2.4 GHz, 5 GHz and 60 GHz...
Latest entries
Getting Familiar with Bluetooth 4.0 Low Energy

Getting Familiar with Bluetooth 4.0 Low Energy

Bluetooth 4.0, with the hallmark feature of Bluetooth low energy wireless technology, is ready to roll. The Bluetooth SIG formally adopted the radio and host layers of the specification, and opened qualification for new products in July of last year.
Free and Connected

Free and Connected

Samuel Morse and Alexander Graham Bell came up with inventions that wound up with the country and the world being connected by wires and cables. Guglielmo Marconi came up with a wrinkle that allowed information to be exchanged without the wires. Over the years, we have seen the proliferation of wireless connectivity with the option...

Speeding Embedded Wireless Designs with Ultra Wideband and Existing Software

A wireless replacement for USB can eliminate cables and keep high-speed data transfer between devices at up to 30 feet.
Defining the Future of Multi-Gigabit Wireless Communications

Defining the Future of Multi-Gigabit Wireless Communications

The WiGig specification utilizes the unlicensed 60 GHz band worldwide to provide data rates up to 7 Gbit/s. Based on the 802.11 standard, it includes native support for Wi-Fi over 60 GHz. Products with tri-band radios will be able to transparently switch among 2.4 GHz, 5 GHz and 60 GHz networks.