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News
Industry Leaders Developing First High-Speed Personal
Wireless Interconnect; Formation of Wireless USB Promoter Group
Announced (23/2/2004)
Focused on delivering the first high-speed personal
wireless interconnect, Intel Corporation and other technology industry
leaders have formed the Wireless USB Promoter Group. Other members
include Agere Systems, HP, Microsoft Corporation, NEC, Philips Semiconductors
and Samsung Electronics.
Wireless USB personal connectivity will bring
the convenience and mobility of wireless communications to high-speed
interconnects for multimedia consumer electronics, PC peripherals
and mobile devices.
The promoter group has already begun defining
the Wireless USB specification with a targeted bandwidth of 480
Mbps that maintains the same usage and architecture as wired USB
as a high-speed host-to-device connection. This will enable an easy
migration path for today's wired USB solutions.
The spec will be based on Ultra-Wideband
(UWB) radio efforts by the MultiBand OFDM Alliance (MBOA) and WiMedia
Alliance, both open industry associations that promote personal-area
range wireless connectivity and interoperability among multimedia
devices in a networked environment.
The 480 Mbps initial target bandwidth of
Wireless USB is comparable to the current wired USB 2.0 standard,
and will feature wireless high-data throughput with low power consumption
for distances under 10 meters. The Wireless USB interface will deliver
the benefits of high-speed wireless connectivity, security, ease-of-use
and backward compatibility to customers.
Intel led the formation of the Wireless USB
Promoter Group with the understanding that the USB Implementers
Forum (USB-IF) would act as the trade association for the Wireless
USB specification. Intel will continue to drive this initiative
into the marketplace as the first commercial application to run
on top of the Common UWB Radio platform. A completed Wireless USB
spec is expected by year's end.
"The Wireless USB Promoter Group is committed
to preserving the existing USB device and class driver infrastructure
and investment, look-and-feel and ease-of-use of wired USB," said
Jeff Ravencraft, Intel technology strategist and USB-IF chairman.
"Wireless USB will preserve the functionality of wired USB while
also unwiring the cable connection and providing enhanced support
for streaming media CE devices and peripherals."
Added Microsoft Corp.'s Tom Phillips, general
manager of Windows Hardware, "The Wireless USB Promoter Group is
at the forefront of developing wireless USB specifications that
will have widespread benefits for both our customers and the industry.
Microsoft is pleased to be a part of this organization and we look
forward to the solutions wireless USB interfaces will deliver."
The first Wireless USB implementations are
expected to be in the form of discrete silicon that will be introduced
in a number of form factors. These include add-in cards and dongles
along with embedded solutions to support the technology's introduction
and subsequent rapid ramp-up.
Joining the seven promoter group companies
as key contributors are Appairent Technologies, Alereon Inc., STMicroelectronics
and Wisair.
www.intel.com
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