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This story appeared on Network World at
http://www.networkworld.com/news/2006/010906-ces.html
Wireless wows 'em at crowded Vegas show
By John Cox, Network World, 01/09/06
LAS VEGAS - "It was very overwhelming."
That was how Andrew Hintz, Internet technology director for the California
Democratic Party, summed up Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates' razzle-dazzle
digital lifestyle presentation at last week's sprawling, hyperkinetic
International Consumer Electronics Show (CES).
He pretty well summed up the entire event (see all our coverage from
the show), which spread from the massive Las Vegas Convention Center
to the merely big Sands Convention Center, to accommodate 2,500 exhibitors
and an estimated 100,000 daily visitors, including Hollywood types such
as singer Justin Timberlake and actor Morgan Freeman. The event pulsed
with music and lights, and featured an astonishing number of companies
whose sole reason for being seems to be creating accessories for Apple's
iPod music player.
But digging deeper into CES announcements and demonstrations shows why
the event has become such a draw, particularly in the areas of wireless
and mobile computing.
Solid advances were evident at the show, though conflicts over standardizing
some technologies and complex user interfaces and configuration schemes
remain stubborn obstacles.
The biggest name in chips, Intel, formally unveiled two systems based
on its latest processors and chipsets: notebooks based on the Centrino
Duo technology, formerly known as Napa, and Viiv (rhymes with "five")
home entertainment PCs.
Intel's first dual-core version of the Pentium M processor, is now known
as Core Duo. This chip will provide the basis for all of Intel's processors
starting later this year. The Centrino Duo package will feature the
Core Duo processor, a mobile-optimized chipset, and an upgraded wireless
chipset that supports 802.11a/b/g.
Atheros Communications demonstrated a new MIMO chipset that delivers
data at rates as high as 300Mbps, with enough range to blanket a typical
home. Broadcom unveiled what it says is the first Wi-Fi chipset designed
for video phones. It's aimed at mobile and desktop phones. The chipset
packages a Broadcom VoIP processor, its 802.11b/g wireless LAN (WLAN)
chip and a chip designed for video processing.
Broadband wireless
Samsung demonstrated notebooks and smartphones communicating over its
WiBro wireless broadband network, based on the mobile WiMAX standard,
IEEE 802.16e. Korea's leading telco, KT, plans to go live with a WiBro
net this spring, using Samsung's base stations, network core gear and
handsets carrying a 802.16e radio.
The demo showed a laptop receiving streaming video, three others doing
videoconferencing and a handful of Samsung smartphones doing messaging
and sharing pictures over the WiMAX connection. With everything running
full-bore, the demo network had 800Kbps for the downlink and 550Kbps
for the uplink. KT expects to see vastly higher rates: 5.8Mbps upstream
and 2.3Mbps downstream, Samsung says.
Also, HP announced a notebook computer with built-in support for Verizon
Wireless' EV-DO network in the United States. This is the latest example
of a trend toward such connectivity, as Dell has announced plans to
embed EV-DO and High Speed Downlink Packet Access chips into its notebooks,
and Lenovo announced a High-Speed Downlink Packet Access notebook in
partnership with Cingular Wireless.
"This starts to bring out the promise of corporate applications
available anytime, anywhere," says Todd Bradley, executive vice
president of HP's personal systems group.
Another example of the fast-growing capabilities of wireless is start-up
Amimon, which demonstrated a 5-GHz wireless technology that, the company
says, is the first to process uncompressed high-definition video and
transmit it wirelessly at about 20Mbps to TV displays inside a room.
"TVs don't connect to the Ethernet, or to a set-top box via USB,"
says Noam Geri, Amimon's vice president of marketing. "They connect
using a wired video interface such as [Digital Video Interactive], [High-Definition
Multimedia Interface] or component video. We're the first to offer a
wireless version of these wired interfaces."
Ultra wideband update
Ultra wideband (UWB) vendors unveiled development kits and conducted
demonstrations that showed the low-power radio technology in action.
UWB can transmit up to 480Mbps at six to 10 feet, with an eventual maximum
range of about 150 feet.
PulseLink showed a UWB connection between a Microsoft Xbox 360 gaming
console and a flat-panel TV. Alereon released development tools for
its UWB boards and reference designs, covering both network and wireless
USB, which uses UWB to replace cables between a PC and peripheral devices.
But conflicts between two UWB groups (the WiMedia Alliance and the UWB
Forum) promoting different modulation schemes has brought the standardization
work of the IEEE 802.15.3a task force to a "standstill," says
Edward Thomas, former chief engineer for the FCC, who was active in
winning a green light for UWB from the FCC. He predicts the task force
will disband next year, ceding standardization to European bodies.
But the conflict didn't stop Belkin from unveiling the CableFree USB
Hub, which it bills as the first UWB-based device in the U.S. market.
A user plugs up to four existing USB devices into the hub, which uses
UWB components from Freescale, to connect to a PC fitted with a UWB
adapter. Wireless USB dongles and adapter cards are due out this year.
The Tower of Babel syndrome is even more evident for wireless sensor
networks being applied to home automation and building controls, where
no clear standard rules. There are competing radio formats and network
protocol stacks from groups such as the Zigbee Alliance (which uses
the IEEE 802.15.4 standard for the radio link), the Z-Wave Alliance
and Smarthome's Insteon.
Bulogics released BaseCamp, a $400 Z-Wave-based controller that plugs
into a television to display a graphical control interface for other
Z-Wave products in the home. Users navigate and configure settings using
a small handheld remote.
Control4 demonstrated its Home Theater Controller, with built-in Ethernet,
802.11b/g, and Zigbee support. Though targeted at controlling home audiovisual
gear, and streaming audio and video, ranging from TVs to iPods, the
system's software and remote are also intended to configure the company's
Zigbee light switches, Ethernet touch screens, light dimmers, 802.11b/g
wireless speakers and other products.
Control4 CTO Eric Smith uses the products in his home. Leaving the house,
he presses the on-screen "house off" button, which shuts off
and dims lights, adjusts the heat settings, and verbally announces "back
door left open." The kitchen lights flash whenever the family Xbox
is turned on, so he can stay aware of his kids' entertainment-to-homework
ratio.
"Home automation has been 'just around the corner' for 20 years,"
Smith says. IP networking and wireless networks and standards have now
made it much simpler, and now make it possible to retrofit automation
controls to existing buildings.
The IDG News Service contributed to this report.
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