Please wait while the page is being loaded Skip this advertisement >
Monday | 8 September, 2008
ARN
Wireless USB creeps nearer
Peter Judge (Techworld.com) 20 December, 2005 08:07:05

Related Stories
  • +

    13 Future mobile technologies that will change your life 23 October, 2007 10:12:14

    These disruptive technologies will affect how you work, play and communicate when you're mobile.
    Most of us take it for granted that we can check e-mail with our mobile phones. But not long ago, this was a truly disruptive technology that changed how we did business and stayed in touch when we were away from home and the office.
Additional Resources
ARN Library

Newsletter Subscription

Sign up for our ARN newsletters!
The premier provider of daily news to the IT channel, covering business, technology, products, and services.
RSS Feeds

The wireless replacement for USB has come a step closer to reality -- and some questions on migration have been answered -- with the release of a reference design from Wisair.

Wireless USB, which will work at 480Mbit/s using short-range ultra-wide band (UWB) radio has been specified by a group led by Intel, and has its standards published online.

Wisair has produced working Wireless USB devices that connecting wireless and existing wired devices. A USB dongle plugs into the PC and gives it Wireless USB powers, while a wireless USB "hub" has sockets for existing USB devices and a wireless USB link back to the PC.

"Wireless USB, naturally, will be native in the PC and in devices eventually, but to support your existing PCs and laptops and all the millions of USB devices out there -- the cameras and hard disks and printers -- you have to start with a wired adapter concept," Serdar Yurdakul, Wisair's director of marketing told online news site Wi-Fi Planet.

Wireless USB puts the USB protocols on top of an underlying ultra-wide band pipe, and the USB standards makers have chosen the WiMedia flavor of UWB which is backed by Intel. Earlier this month, the WiMedia succeeded in getting its specification published as a formal standard by the ECMA group -- despite its being deadlocked in the IEEE by a rival proposal from Freescale.

As with the debate on underlying UWB standards, the wireless USB issue may not be entirely simple. USB specialist Icron has demonstrated its own wireless ExtremeUSB USB 2.0 implementation over Freescale's UWB products.

Meanwhile, just to show that there's still interest in wired USB, we noticed while we were at Icron's site, that it has pushed regular USB up to 10km using fiber-optic. Now we're trying to imagine a use for that.

Market Place

ARN Member Login

 
Panel Sessions
  • ARN Panel Sessions: Day 3

    The last of our panel sessions recorded live at CeBIT 2008. Today, the topic is storage. Data is growing at an enormous rate, so what does the future hold?

Play
ARN news Channel Watch
  • Brian's bloopers

    It takes a long time to produce an episode of Channel Watch. Maybe you'll understand why after watching this...

Play
Business Continuity & Disaster Recovery Zone

When an IT disaster occurs, how handy it would be to push a button and start again as if nothing had happened.
Discover and learn more about CA XOSoft today.
ARN Vendor Directory
ARN Library

How to Beef Up Your Sales Pipeline

Our economy may be heading towards a recession. Sales rates are dropping. Promotional campaigns are proving less effective than you would like. So how do you continue to grow your business and bring home the sales in such an environment? Download this white paper now to find the answers.

Sponsored Links