Santa Clara, CA, Apr. 18 (UPI) -- California chipmaker Intel on Monday unveiled a chip for a long-range wireless Internet service, WiMAX, powerful enough to send a signal several miles.
The service can be used to receive and transmit a wireless broadband signal. It will enable delivery of broadband Internet access to remote areas not currently served by DSL or cable, as well as be able to wirelessly connect buildings up to several miles apart, Intel said. Typical wireless, or WiFi, only transmits signals a few hundred feet.
About 20 service and equipment providers worldwide, including Qwest, Siemens, AT&T, and British Telecom, said they plan to join with Intel for commercial WiMAX trials later this year. The trials are to be held by the WiMAX Forum, an industry group that will test and certify interoperability among WiMAX products from different manufacturers.
Intel's interface device is based on the 802.16 wireless standard, which will allow equipment from different companies to work together, Intel said.
WiMAX is short for Worldwide Interoperability for Microwave Access.
This has been a long time coming, nice to hear it's finally ready to go public. :icon14:
This paper was written in an effort to demonstrate the applicability of professional microwave engineering techniques to consumer wireless networks using unregulated spectrum by documenting the design and implementation of a 7-kilometer 802.11b bridge. The wireless revolution is in full force. The 802.11b standard adapted in 1999 created the first wireless standard to break through the important 10 mbps barrier. Shortly after adoption, inexpensive consumer wireless devices became widely available. At first, these were used for the predicted purpose of creating a local network at home. Later people discovered that using directional antennas allowed these devices to communicate over long distances. In a quest to spread the broadband revolution, some users started building point-to-point links several miles long. Many of these links were built using trial-and-error. However, the science of engineering microwave networks is not new. Professionals have been designing long distance links using regulated microwave frequencies for years. With improved scientific knowledge of microwave engineering, individuals will be able to create even more amazing wireless feats.
stocktroll wrote:wake me up when you can ping to any major region in the world at under 100ms latency and can roll on 100Mb standard personal connections,