Ultrawideband May Stall Before It Starts 97
judgecorp writes "The IEEE's group for faster Wi-Fi, 802.11n has reached the end-point, with the Intel-backed TGn Sync proposal taking the lead. This is a contrast to the ultrawideband world 802.15.3a, where the competing proposals are slugging it out. Indeed, the vendors could be in for more trouble than they expect getting UWB past regulators in Europe." From the article: "Within the next two years, we should start to see fast wireless links based on ultrawideband (UWB), taking the place of short-range connections such as USB and Firewire, and providing fast data links between consumer goods. Chipmakers are now on the verge of creating the silicon, and vendor groups are completing the standards.But the technology may have trouble getting a world market, as regulators wrestle with the objections of the cellphone industry. UWB standards are in deadlock at the IEEE; but what the regulators say matters far more to the future of the technology."
Phew (Score:5, Funny)
When can I get my "mofasterbiggerwider-fi?"
Re:Phew (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Phew (Score:1)
Re:Phew (Score:2)
(I wanted to say "eat sheep" to get the "baad" joke, but couldn't find a way to do a "p"... Or an "h" for that matter, but just slur the last word ;-)
Re:Phew (Score:2)
-Jesse
Re:Phew (Score:2)
Re:Phew (Score:2)
-Jesse
Re:Phew (Score:1)
n. pl. fidelities
1. Faithfulness to obligations, duties, or observances.
2. Exact correspondence with fact or with a given quality, condition, or event; accuracy.
3. The degree to which an electronic system accurately reproduces the sound or image of its input signal.
I don't know about you, but #2 sounds like something I'd want from my wireless hardware.
Digital != lossless transmission, especially when transmitting using a method prone to interference or signal loss, such as RF.
Re:Phew (Score:2, Funny)
Well, actually it is.
Re:Phew (Score:2)
It smells like bits to me!
Bluetooth (Score:1)
Re:Bluetooth (Score:5, Informative)
-- Andyvan
Re:Bluetooth (Score:1)
Re:Bluetooth (Score:2)
Re:Bluetooth (Score:1)
I don't know.
Certainly running hot for a small percentage of the time, vs. low power much of the time, will put a different kind of load on a battery.
Also, waking up every so often and grabbing everything at high speed so that you can go back to sleep again only works if the other side can give you a lot of data during the device's "up" time.
I would also imagine that waking up might introduce some burstiness, and hence lag, into the data stream.
don't forget bluetooth2.0 (Score:2)
i do not know if BT2.0 has any range improvments? i assume not since it still is not intended to replace WiFi.
from apple.com:
Bluetooth 2.0+EDR, while still backwards-compatible with Bluetooth 1.x, is up to three times faster than its predecessors, offering a maximum data rate of 3Mbps. As the first company to certify a system supporting Bluetooth 2.0+EDR (enhanced data rate) specification with t
Re:don't forget bluetooth2.0 (Score:1)
Fast Release (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Fast Release (Score:3, Interesting)
so go away and don't come back until you standards people have something that will mean monitors don't need physical connections to computers.
that's the only thing I can think of at the moment that will actually allow a qualitative change in the power of wireless technology - everything else is just bigger-numbers-BS.
Re:Fast Release (Score:3, Insightful)
Well I disagree. The problem is that in Wireless there are often some number of users sharing the airwaves, so what starts off sounding like a big number diminishes quickly.
Plus, if you want to use repeaters to extend the range (e.g. wireless mesh), the total bandwidth required is multiplied once again.
When a trainload of peo
Re:Fast Release (Score:2)
Re:Fast Release (Score:2)
this story is about W-I-R-E-L-E-S-S.
reply when ethernet starts pushing more than 4 different standards in as many years.
4 different standards in as many years (Score:2)
there are 35 different versions of ethernet listed
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/10_Gigabit_Ethernet [wikipedia.org]
of 10gb ethernet ALONE there are 8 versions, and unless you think 10gb ethernet has been around since 1997? that's better than 4 in 4
Re:Fast Release (Score:2)
You have to have it plugged into the wall for power. Even if it was battery powered, it would still need periodic recharging. Are you actually going to take it and carry it somewhere else? I have never understood people's need for wireless mice/keyboards when 95% of the time they keep them in the exact. same. place.
802.15 (Score:5, Funny)
Re:802.15 (Score:1, Funny)
Why are you listening? (Score:5, Interesting)
Why are regulators even listening to the cell phone industry? Existing monopolies should not be allowed to control new technologies in their own best interests.
Re:Why are you listening? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Why are you listening? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Why are you listening? (Score:4, Insightful)
I want to know about the costs of this, and the relative power here because if I need to be with ten feet to use it at 100Mbit/s then there really is no point.
Re:Why are you listening? (Score:2)
Then the power of the purse will be greatly reduced. They can't accept bribes or even discuss them while in office (of course, there's the time leading up to being elected that they could make these arrangements, so it's not airtight), and everything they do is monitored and available to the citizens.
Then government will truly be transparen
Because of Radio Interference (Score:5, Insightful)
Of course, UWB technology is designed to pretty much not interfere with anything else, and it's far better at it than WiFi, which has already annoyed the regulatory environment by being wildly successful in large part *because* its development isn't limited by regulators. So 99% of the "interference" is "people might buy UWB instead of 3G", but that's expressed in technical terms of "they might garble a few bits on our services which are fairly robust, have built-in ECC, and run TCP protocols which detect and correct for errors", so the 3G owners ask for unreasonably low power levels for UWB and the regulators go along with them. In reality, the equipment will probably have user-adjustable signal levels, they'll get type-approved with the Eurocrat settings, and users will immediately crank them up to US power levels, which still won't bother anybody.
Re:Why are you listening? (Score:2)
besides than that.. wanna bet that some of these companies pushing for this ARE in fact in cellphone industry themselfs?
Re:Why are you listening? (Score:1)
Re:Pluses and minuses of ultrawideband. (Score:2, Funny)
Sorry you asked now, aren't you...
New Aaron spelling show (Score:5, Funny)
next weeks episode features 50% more petty vendor squabbling and competitors attempt to sabotage.
Re:New Aaron spelling show (Score:2)
Re:Season finale (Score:1)
Dell Dude: Dude, you're getting an abortion!
Re:Season finale (Score:1)
Security (Score:5, Insightful)
We'll need a secure channel of communications for every device, even one as low bandwidth consumption as a keyboard.
Re:Security (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Security (Score:3, Interesting)
No kidding. The FBI will no longer need a big white van filled with Tempest equipment, they'll be able to sit in their k-car with a laptop and directional antenna, and just log everything...
Re:Security (Score:1)
And anyway, with UWB output power limits, you'd need to be very close to have a chance to pick it up. Normal range is going to be up to 10 meters (just short of 11 yards).
The rates will be up to 480Mbps.
GGF
Normal Range and bigger antennas... (Score:2)
Sure, that's for the normal, tiny antenna. But as the parent posted about a TEMPEST van, these guys could actually receive, amplify, and display a computer screen from across the block, just from the EM radiation.
So the FBI guy ends up with an antenna filling his trunk, an antenna that looks like a auxillery cell or cb antenna. Still easier than trying to tap a 100Mbit or 1Gbit land line.
Re:Normal Range and bigger antennas... (Score:1)
1. All traffic is encrypted.
2. There are anti-replay counters.
3. There are multiple-key exchanges.
4. A method for ensuring devices can't be "impersonated".
Don't get me wrong - I don't believe these measures are going to help. The only thing that's going to ensure your data's safety from prying eyes, is if you are sufficiently paranoid.
It's like the thing with viruses - you put an anti-virus on your PC, and t
Re:Normal Range and bigger antennas... (Score:2)
2. Sure, you won't be able to just replay a bit of traffic to duplicate results. But my concern is that this kind of system is going to be designed to be so easy to set up that all sorts of holes.
I agree, this system is most likely going to be unsecure.
Re:Security (Score:2)
Then comes the questions of price. USB is cheap, I doubt this will "outcheap" it. I don't want an extra 10-20$ extra tacked onto everything I buy - and have to buy PCI (and PCMCIA?) cards for all my PCs so I can use the devices (might add a small cost to new PCs as well)
And third, even if we eliminate the concerns of being irradiated by dozens of RF devices day long at home and work (including small children), there's still the interference problem. I've h
Re:Security (Score:2, Funny)
Secondly, since when are small children RF devices?
how fast is fast (Score:2)
(if there are competing standards, what are each of their bandwidths?)
Re:how fast is fast (Score:1)
i) Motorola-side, using "Direct Sequence Spread-Spectrum".
ii) Intel (MBOA), using a different method.
Both promise about
GGF
Well, it's Ultra Wide Band (Score:2)
OK, so what they're really doing is swapping from the time domain to the frequency domain to transmit data. What this does is add noise to all of the frequencies it operates over, and with a name like Ultra Wide Band as you might
Interference issues: raising the N in SNR (Score:5, Interesting)
The problem is that each UWB device will raise the noise level in all the spectral bands that it covers. With enough UWB devices (or short enough distances to a UWB device), the utility of these other bands will drop. If you paid 5 billion dollars for something, you might scream if someone else started degrading the performance of your investment.
Re:Interference issues: raising the N in SNR (Score:1)
Re:Interference issues: raising the N in SNR (Score:3, Insightful)
Now, how traditional communications channels work is they transmit at higher frequencies, but concentrate their energy in a small slice of that frequency - hopefully the pa
Re:Interference issues: raising the N in SNR (Score:1)
thats right, but the fear of UWB opponents is that when you have lots of UWB devices around (once it becomes mainstream), the noise may sum up to a level that it can jam the narrowband devices.
Re:Interference issues: raising the N in SNR (Score:2)
This is such a great example of the pot calling the kettle black. GPS interferes with everything! It interferes with speakers and wireless connections of all kinds. When I receive a call in my home office on my cell phone - my PC speakers buzz like fog horns, my cordless house phone starts searching for its base, my baby monitor receiver goes crazy, and if I stand close enough my
Huh? (Score:1)
Mobile phones use GSM (mostly)
Re:Interference issues: raising the N in SNR (Score:2)
GSM does produce interference in other devices, especially during call setup and cell switching, due to the high-power-then-ramp-down model used.
Re:Interference issues: raising the N in SNR (Score:2)
What end-point? (Score:4, Insightful)
UWB (Score:1)
Re:UWB (Score:1)
UWB signals look like noise to frequency tethered devices.
This says it all (Score:5, Insightful)
Emphasis mine.
You Be The Judge (Score:5, Interesting)
I note that even in the TechWorld article, by Peter Judge (which won't specify just how far from decisive was the actual vote), doesn't quite distort the status as "reached the end-point". But the Slashdot story, submitted by judgecorp, spins it even further than than TechWorld. Again, does judgecorp work for Intel, as well as TechWorld, paid to spin IEEE news more when there's less editorial oversight?
Re:You Be The Judge (Score:2)
The 12% lead is <1/4 the 50% margin necessary for passage.
Darn "<" entity.
Re:You Be The Judge (Score:1)
In my original Slashdot submission, I believe I wrote "end-game" rather than "end-point", which seems fair. It either got changed or I mis-typed (in which case I apologise) - I can't check which here.
Either way, your accusation
UWB doesn't help -- there's only so much spectrum. (Score:4, Interesting)
In the software world we're used to super-duper-ultra-wideband spaces: MD5 hashes are a good example. You don't have to bother decolliding MD5 hashes -- there are so many that no two documents are likely to ever collide by chance. But you can't just "add more bits" to the electromagnetic spectrum: once you get down below about a centimeter, you might as well be using infrared instead of radio.
It's the same problem as those RF-excited plasma light bulbs that were all the rage a while ago: the first 10,000 or so work great -- but by the time you deployed 10 of 'em to every household in America, nobody's radio would work any more.
Re:UWB doesn't help -- there's only so much spectr (Score:3, Informative)
I don't think you really understand the concern here. UWB's main caveat is that it would raise the noise floor, making traditional wireless signals *possibly* harder to decode. UWB has extremely short ran
Re:UWB doesn't help -- there's only so much spectr (Score:2)
Normal radios use a simple discriminator: the carrier frequency. UWB devices use a code-multiplex discrimator that operates on frequencies much as a hash function operates on bit values.
The rub is -- what is "properly designed" and how likely is it?
Re:UWB doesn't help -- there's only so much spectr (Score:1)
all this wireless (Score:1)
UwB is great because of it's radiowave penetration. It can go through a lot because o