Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Rohm builds chip that will send data at 30Gbps

  Ruckus tackles channel-changing in Wi-Fi | Father of RFID, Charles Walton, dies at 89
 
  Computerworld Wireless Networking

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Rohm builds chip that will send data at 30Gbps
Japanese component maker Rohm said it has developed an experimental chip that can send and receive signals at terahertz-range frequencies, which can carry data at speeds of up to 30Gbps and penetrate clothing and paper. Read More


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Ruckus tackles channel-changing in Wi-Fi
Ruckus Wireless took another shot at optimizing Wi-Fi capacity on Monday, introducing a technology called ChannelFly that is designed to place network clients on the best possible channel based on the actual capacity of that channel. Read More

Father of RFID, Charles Walton, dies at 89
Charles Walton, inventor of the RFID technology now common everywhere from warehouses to retail stores to public libraries, has died at the age of 89 in California. Read More


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Spectrum clash builds around bionic implants
The battle over scarce radio spectrum that has embroiled the mobile broadband world even extends to a little-known type of wireless network that promises to reconnect the human nervous system with paralyzed limbs. Read More

Police use radio encryption to stop iPhone eavesdropping
Anxiety over the public snooping of police radios using smartphones is persuading a growing number of police departments to take the controversial step of moving their communications to fully encrypted operation. Read More

Google offers opt-out method for Wi-Fi geolocation mapping
Google is offering wireless network owners worldwide the possibility of opting out from its Wi-Fi geolocation mapping efforts, in the wake of a decision by the Dutch Data Protection Authority that this process is in violation of legislation in the Netherlands. Read More

 
 
 

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