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NICTA Announces 5 Gbps Wireless Breakthrough
in The Wireless Weblog, on February 23, 2008
...development of a new 60GHz CMOS single-chip solution that can transfer wireless data at up to 5 Gbps.
According to NICTA CTO Dr. Chris Nicol, that's ten times the current maximum wireless tr...
Stocking the Larder in a Good Way?
in On Storage, on November 20, 2007
...es, larger entities should not rely solely on the technology. True, speeds are improving - up to 10 Gbps - but for higher-performance needs, it should not be the cure -all.
Read the Dell opinio...
Cisco Chair Predicts Web 2.0 To Be Catalyst For Major Change
in Networking for Pros, on July 27, 2007
...zations. Chambers predicted that standard home networking connections will range from 100 Mbps to 1 Gbps. In some respects, this is already being played out by companies like Verizon and AT&T, w...
GIT Experimenting With High Frequency RF Networks
in Networking for Pros, on July 20, 2007
...Hz frequencies, which are in the unlicensed spectrum and has produced data Transfer rates of 15 Gbps at a distance of 1 meter, and 5 Gbps at a distance of 5 meters.
The technology is being develo...
Juniper Introduces E120 Broadband Services Router
in Networking for Pros, on July 9, 2007
...ries line of broadband routers. The E120 was designed with distribution in mind and can deliver 120 Gbps of "multiplay" services like entertainment, music, games and video to 64,000 broadban...
Let the Sun Shine In
in The Digital TV Weblog, on May 13, 2007
... throughput.
That's well past the specs listed by Motorola for its B-1 server, which touts 80 gbps of output per system and a maximum of 20,000 simultaneous MPEG-2 streams, as well as other vend...
Introducing 802.16m
in The Wireless Weblog, on February 21, 2007
...dubbed 802.16m."
The aim of the new version, Murph says, will be to push data speeds up to 1 Gbps -- and that's not all. "Potentially more interesting than cheering for speed boosts is...
Mintera Adds to Management Team and Strengthens Supply Chain
in Supplychainer, on January 10, 2007
...oration , the technology leader enabling migration of optical transport to 40 Gigabits per second (Gbps) in metro-core, regional and ultra long-haul networks, today announced the appointment of Bryan ...
The WiBro - 4G - IMS Continuum
in The Wireless Weblog, on November 22, 2006
... future 4G network will integrate both wired and wireless connectivity to support speeds of up to 1 Gbps.
What makes WiBro unique, Lee said, is its ability to provide "handover functionality&qu...
WirelessHD vs. UWB
in The Wireless Weblog, on November 3, 2006
Mediacaster Magazine reports that LG, Panasonic, NEC, Samsung, SiBEAM, Sony and Toshiba are working together on a new special interest group (SIG) called Wireless HD .
The aim, according to the article, is to "develop a wireless high-definition digital interface (WirelessHD or ...
NTT DoCoMo's Prototype 4G Phone: The Matrix Is Here
in The Wireless Weblog, on October 30, 2006
...xperience a prototype 4G phone, intended for release in... 2015.
The handset, which runs over a 1 Gbps connection, houses a pair of 3D goggles which provide data on surrounding locations -- a...
NTT DoCoMo Breaks 4G Speed Record
in The Wireless Weblog, on February 23, 2006
... TelecomWeb reports that NTT DoCoMo today claimed that it had demonstrated a successful 2.5 Gbps downlink packet transmission while moving at 20 kilometers per hour in Yokosuka, Kanagawa Prefect...
IBM Intros Next PAN Standard
in The Wireless Weblog, on February 7, 2006
...cation for wireless personal area networks (WPANs). 802.15.3c aims to deliver data rates of 2 to 3 Gbps or more. Brian Gaucher, Research Manager at IBM Research , says 60 GHz, where 802.15.3c opera...
The move to 4 Gps
in On Storage, on January 5, 2006
...e Channel, SAN, Storage Hardware, Storage Infrastructure :
Fibre channel SANs have entered the 4 Gbps world doubling, the speed of the storage communication interface and improving overall storage ...
Why the Wireless Home Theater is Still a Dream
in The Wired Home Weblog, on July 7, 2005
...the way. Do the math: 480p EDTV requires about 500 Mbps, and full 1080p will suck down the entire 5 Gbps available on HDMI! There are, as I noted above, no wireless technologies available to us mere m...




