Search Results for wireless tag:blogs.intel.com,2009:/cgi-bin/mt//feed/wireless 2009-11-23T14:44:57Z Movable Type 4.21-en 11 1 11 Rattner: The promise of wireless power tag:blogs.intel.com,2008:/research//17.2323 2008-10-02T22:10:00Z 2008-11-10T18:30:08Z Justin Rattner http://blogs.intel.com/research/2007/06/profile_justin_rattner.php In the past few years, we have experienced a dramatic revolution in the number of electronic devices—cell phones, digital cameras, laptops, etc.—that we use in our everyday lives. Currently, most of these devices are powered by batteries, which need to... Trustworthy Wireless Research in Seattle tag:blogs.intel.com,2008:/research//17.2321 2008-10-01T16:24:13Z 2008-11-10T18:32:21Z Cheryl Miller It should be no surprise to anybody that the use of wireless devices is becoming increasingly pervasive. At the same time, however, the best security practices - firewalls, virtual private networks, WAP and WPA encryption - don’t protect our privacy... Wireless Displays: To Compress or Not Compress tag:blogs.intel.com,2008:/research//17.1415 2008-03-28T15:00:00Z 2008-07-30T22:42:29Z Jeffrey Foerster This years CES was filled with a variety of wireless display and wireless HDMI solutions using various combinations of radios (proprietary radios in the UWB or 5 GHz unlicensed bands, WiFi-based, UWB/W-USB based, and 60 GHz based) and compression algorithms... Vic Lortz on Amplifying your Mobile Experience tag:blogs.intel.com,2008:/research//17.1414 2008-03-27T23:33:31Z 2008-07-30T22:42:29Z Guest Blogger Intel is in the enabling game. As a building block supplier, our business is based on the premise that when our customers win, we win, too. We are also in an industry that is constantly pursuing the next big thing... Dynamic Composable Computing (DCC) tag:blogs.intel.com,2008:/research//17.1413 2008-03-27T16:05:00Z 2008-07-30T22:42:29Z Roy Want http://blogs.intel.com/research/2007/10/profile_roy_want.php In the last 10 years, personal computing has evolved from being primarily a desktop activity to a highly mobile one: the laptop computer, despite its large size and significant weight, has been the most popular mobile platform to date. While... Hasnain Lakdawala on a spectrum sensing, reconfigurable ADC tag:blogs.intel.com,2008:/research//17.1364 2008-03-12T07:01:00Z 2008-06-12T00:24:16Z Guest Blogger One of the consequences of widespread use of wireless is that the spectrum is getting crowded. Radio standards must be designed to operate under this rather hostile environment with the presence of a lot of blocking signals in the channels... Krishnamurthy Soumyanath on ISSCC: Research steps to a Digital Multi Radio tag:blogs.intel.com,2008:/research//17.1174 2008-02-04T05:00:00Z 2008-03-18T16:39:16Z Guest Blogger Wireless communication is growing so fast that soon it might be difficult to get a decent wireless connection at your favorite coffee shop. At the Communications Circuits Lab of Intel Corporation, we have been doing research on techniques that will... USB 3.0: Rocket Fast File Transfers tag:blogs.intel.com,2007:/research//17.937 2007-10-23T23:30:26Z 2008-02-29T15:18:10Z Brian McCarthy http://blogs.intel.com/research/2007/06/profile_brian_mccarthy.php In this post, I share with you an interview with Jeff Ravencraft who is a technology strategist in Intel’s Communication Technology Lab, where he leads Intel’s effort in USB and Wireless USB. Jeff is also the Chairman and President of... Wireless Co-existence: Helping radios get along with each other tag:blogs.intel.com,2007:/research//17.904 2007-10-15T04:21:37Z 2008-02-29T21:38:38Z Xingang Guo Let’s take this opportunity to talk about wireless co-existence, an issue that begins to draw broad attention in the mobile communication industry, an issue that will help shape the system and architecture design of mobile device and infrastructure for years... Enabling wireless broadband technology tag:blogs.intel.com,2007:/research//17.785 2007-08-29T16:55:59Z 2008-02-29T21:28:56Z 杜江凌 (John Du) http://blogs.intel.com/research/2007/06/profile_john_du.php By John Du, reposted from our Chinese language blog. In my past posts, I’ve talked about Tera-scale computing. Intel has been doing research in both software and hardware on future processor platforms with 10s to 100s of cores. Our objective... Trends in short-range wireless personal area networking (WPAN) technology tag:blogs.intel.com,2007:/research//17.637 2007-06-19T17:00:09Z 2008-02-29T21:49:22Z Jeffrey Foerster Bluetooth can be considered the first wireless personal area networking (WPAN) technology accepted in the market enabling new usages like hands-free cell phone connectivity, wireless headsets, electronic wallet transactions, and others. For this discussion, WPAN technology is considered to support...