Overcoming Wireless USB commercialization challenges
By Gadi Shor, Wisair
Aug 7 2007 (14:43 PM), Wireless Net DesignLine
Today, the face of UWB and Wireless USB technology continues to evolve as it marches toward mass market commercialization. Wireless USB, also known as Certified Wireless USB, is a short-range, high-bandwidth wireless extension to USB that combines the speed and ease-of-use of USB 2.0 with the convenience of wireless technology.
Many anticipate that it will eventually become the personal and home area network of choice for high speed digital media transfer between devices, especially as the technology begins to reach out to the mass market via devices like PCs and mobile handsets.
Certified Wireless USB products are already poised to hit the market this year with initial products to include laptops, as well as dongle and hub solutions that allow PCs to wirelessly connect to PC peripherals and CE devices. By mid 2008, integrated solutions with built-in Certified Wireless USB capability may also be available in a few devices, such as printers and digital still cameras.
Such product introductions bode well for the commercialization of Wireless USB. Yet, like any new technology, its widespread proliferation will not come easy.
A number of key technological challenges must first be overcome if it is to become a true mainstream mass market technology—not the least of which is slashing chip prices, via migration to a single-chip solution, so that it is affordable to average consumers (See Sidebar: Lessons Learned.
Fortunately, there are solutions available to help design teams overcome the challenges of developing a single-chip solution.
To read the full article, click here
Related Semiconductor IP
- 802.11i Wireless Security Cores
- 802.11 a b and g IEEE Standard - Wireless LAN
- LDPC Decoder for 5G NR and Wireless
- Multi-protocol wireless platform integrating Bluetooth Dual Mode, IEEE 802.15.4 (for Thread, Zigbee and Matter)
- Multi-protocol wireless plaform integrating 802.11ax (Wi-Fi 6), Bluetooth 5.4 Dual Mode, 802.15.4 (for Thread, Zigbee and Matter)
Related White Papers
- Wireless SDR: overcoming next gen handset challenges
- Favorable Economics Will Drive Rapid Adoption of Certified Wireless USB
- Stacking up high-speed Bluetooth against Certified Wireless USB
- Overcoming the challenges of formal verification and debug
Latest White Papers
- QiMeng: Fully Automated Hardware and Software Design for Processor Chip
- RISC-V source class riscv_asm_program_gen, the brain behind assembly instruction generator
- Concealable physical unclonable functions using vertical NAND flash memory
- Ramping Up Open-Source RISC-V Cores: Assessing the Energy Efficiency of Superscalar, Out-of-Order Execution
- Transition Fixes in 3nm Multi-Voltage SoC Design