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IEEE Spectrum June 2006 Samuel K. Moore |
Cheap Chips for Next Wireless Frontier IBM engineers unveiled the first experimental 60-GHz transmitter and receiver chips. Now, researchers are presenting three key transceiver components built in a widely available and inexpensive silicon process technology.  |
IEEE Spectrum December 2009 Clark Nguyen |
Radios With Micromachined Resonators Future wireless designs will replace electronics with precision mechanical components.  |
IEEE Spectrum April 2009 Koch & Prasad |
The Universal Handset Software-defined radio will let cellphones speak Wi-Fi, 3G, WiMax, and more.  |
IEEE Spectrum May 2013 Mitchell Lazarus |
When Spectrum Auctions Fail For some microwave links, cooperation beats competition as a way to share the air  |
IEEE Spectrum February 2009 Schneider & Ross |
Antennas for the New Airwaves This month's planned shutdown of analog broadcast TV in the United States will bring antenna technology back into the spotlight.  |
IEEE Spectrum September 2010 Schow et al. |
Get on the Optical Bus IBM's light-powered links overcome the greatest speed bump in supercomputing: interconnect bandwidth  |
Home Toys August 2004 Tunheim & Braathen |
A Single-Chip 2.4 GHz RF Transceiver Compliant with IEEE 802.15.4 and Ready to be Used in ZigBee Solutions The CC2420 makes an excellent fit for IEEE 802.15.4/ZigBee products tageted by home and building automation, industrial monitoring and control and wireless sensor networks applications.  |
Home Toys February 2005 Khanh Tuan Le |
IEEE 802.15.4 and Zigbee Compliant Radio Transceiver Design Zigbee and the underlying IEEE 802.15.4 standard promise a low-cost, low-power and reliable wireless network technology for a wide range of control and monitoring applications within the private sphere and industrial environment.  |
Home Toys August 2003 |
Low cost wireless communication at 2.4GHz in consumer and industrial products The nRF24xx family has already been incorporated in a number of new and existing wireless global applications such as sensor, remote control, mouse, game controllers, tire pressure sensors and intelligent sports equipment applications.  |
IEEE Spectrum May 2012 Alexander Hellemans |
A New Twist on Radio Waves Using the angular momentum of light could make one radio channel into two, three, or more. But many wireless experts are skeptical  |
IEEE Spectrum December 2008 Sally Adee |
The Fastest, the Smallest, and the Strangest at IEDM This year's IEEE International Electron Devices Meeting, as usual, is largely a race to the bottom  |
IEEE Spectrum May 2011 Keane & Kim |
Transistor Aging Measuring the degradation of microprocessors is tricky. Doing it better would unleash more processing power.  |
IEEE Spectrum October 2011 Richard Stevenson |
Long-Distance Car Radar Affordable radar will let every car see through fog, brake on its own, and track other vehicles hundreds of meters ahead  |
PC Magazine May 30, 2007 Anne Louise Bannon |
Kiss Those Cables Goodbye? Organize your desk, remove clutter from your office, even stream video wirelessly! New technologies promise the moon, but when will they deliver?  |
IEEE Spectrum April 2012 Liu et al. |
MEMS Switches for Low-Power Logic A modern twist on a trusted old technology -- the electromechanical relay -- could lead to ultralow-power chips  |
Military & Aerospace Electronics June 2005 John McHale |
RF and Microwave Technology Enable Networking on the Move Designers of RF and microwave technology say low power and small size remain the trend in product designs. Meanwhile, integrators adapt and combine RF and microwave technologies to enable networking on the move.  |
Military & Aerospace Electronics October 2005 Steffen Koehler |
Advances in hybrid optical packaging enable high-bandwidth photonic RF transmission The challenge in exploiting optical fiber for RF transmission lies in getting the RF signals on and off the fiber without degrading the signals. Advances in optical packaging technology are making improvements to military equipment possible.  |
IEEE Spectrum July 2012 Miguel Miranda |
The Threat of Semiconductor Variability As transistors shrink, the problem of chip variability grows  |
IEEE Spectrum May 2009 Guizzo & Santo |
The Runners-up: More Earthshaking Chips These 13 great little chips didn't make our list -- mainly because we ran out of space in print. And, well, one isn't even a chip  |
IEEE Spectrum January 2008 Willie D Jones |
Gigabit Wireless on the Cheap SiBeam aims to put wireless A/V connectivity within the reach of the average consumer.  |
Home Theater March 2003 Peter H. Putman |
Got HDTV? Home Theater's guide to using indoor and outdoor antennas to pick up digital TV broadcasts  |
IEEE Spectrum July 2012 Rachel Courtland |
Power-Saving Clock Scheme in New PCs Resonant clocking recycles energy in new AMD processors  |
IEEE Spectrum November 2012 Rachel Courtland |
Wi-Fi Radio Takes a Digital Turn Intel's new transceiver pushes RF circuitry further into the digital realm, but will it make it out of the lab?  |
IEEE Spectrum November 2008 Samuel K. Moore |
New Class of Digital Signal Processor Wipes Out Wasted Power Hearing aids, power converters, medical implants, and telecommunications could benefit from continuous-time digital signal processing  |
BusinessWeek December 15, 2003 Catherine Yang |
Beyond Wi-Fi: A New Wireless Age Three technologies will boost the capacity of our airwaves -- and innovation, too  |
IEEE Spectrum October 2008 Tekla S. Perry |
Digital Dilemma Converting to digital television is supposed to be simple, but it's not.  |
Military & Aerospace Electronics October 2004 Dave Slack |
Active microwave receiver cable can help with antenna location selection Amplifying small signals, those just at the threshold of detectability, before passing them through significant interconnection losses, can cause targets to be detected that may otherwise have been lost.  |
InternetNews March 2, 2007 Michael Hickins |
Clash of The Robots The National Institute of Standards and Technology warns too may robots spell trouble.  |
Technology Research News November 17, 2004 Eric Smalley |
Nanotubes Tune in Light Carbon nanotubes can act as antennas, but instead of transmitting and receiving radio waves, antennas of their size pick up the nanoscale wavelengths of visible light.  |
T.H.E. Journal June 2006 Wendy Chretien |
A Whole New World of Wi-Fi Think you have a handle on wireless technology in K-12? Not so fast. New standards and technical breakthroughs are about to alter the landscape again.  |
Home Toys August 2005 Adam Blake |
A Technical Introduction to Audio Cables As audio systems continue to improve in accuracy, listening to a "live" performance in your living room gets closer to reality. Cables are an enabling factor for advancements in audio reproduction and can play a remarkably important role in your system.  |
IEEE Spectrum May 2005 Linda Geppert |
Move Over, Quartz The atomic clock gets smaller and cheaper.  |
The Motley Fool March 30, 2006 Jack Uldrich |
IBM's Teeny Tiny Transistors Big Blue's new nanocircuit suggests that carbon nanotubes will soon be employed in hybrid computer circuit devices.  |
IEEE Spectrum January 2012 Katie M. Palmer |
Intellectual Ventures Invents Beam-Steering Metamaterials Antenna IV and others aim at cheap in-flight broadband  |
National Defense April 2008 Grace V. Jean |
A Makeover for Top-Heavy Navy Ships? If the work of Office of Naval Research scientists comes to fruition, antennas on the tops of ships might one day disappear as radio frequency apertures are integrated into the hulls and superstructures of the ships themselves.  |
Technology Research News June 15, 2005 |
Nanowire Computer Circuits Debut Researchers have found a way to paint molecular-size circuitry onto glass. The method is potentially very low-cost, and could eventually be used to make computer chips that pack extremely tiny and thus powerful circuits.  |
IEEE Spectrum August 2008 |
Slideshow: Two Takes on Stretchy Circuits Breakthroughs in the United States and Japan allow for stretchable circuits, curved camera chips, and more.  |
BusinessWeek July 22, 2010 Amy Thomson |
Antennas: Jobs Was Right. They're Still a Challenge As phones continue to shrink, fitting antennas in and making them work correctly often comes down to trial and error.  |
Wired February 23, 2009 Mathew Honan |
Hide the Antenna Inside the Cell Phone The constraint: Tuck a 7-inch antenna inside the case without adding bulk.  |
The Motley Fool June 20, 2006 Jack Uldrich |
Fiction Becomes Fact at IBM A speedy new chip may soon turn sci-fi into reality. This advance essentially provides IBM the opportunity to leapfrog a number of its competitors, and thus capture a larger share of this growing market. Investors, take note.  |
Military & Aerospace Electronics January 2006 |
Capacitors to Address DC Blocking in Optical Transceivers AVX Corp. is offering the GZ capacitor series to address DC blocking issues from 15 KHz to 400 GHz in optical transceivers.  |
PC Magazine September 13, 2006 Bill Machrone |
Wi-Fi Fun on Vacation Use a Hawking Wi-Fi corner antenna to strengthen your weak signal.  |
IEEE Spectrum July 2010 David Schneider |
Home-Built Radio Rules The FCC's treatment of home-built devices could stand an update  |
IndustryWeek August 1, 2006 John Teresko |
Transistor Performance: High Potential For Silicon-Germanium? Thinking of transistors for mobile electronics? Researchers have developed silicon-germanium (SiGe) transistors with record-setting performance, low energy consumption-and no manufacturing cost penalty.  |