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About the authors
Russell Shaw Russell Shaw is a specialist in mobile computing, telephony, networking and covers these fields regularly for numerous print and online publications. Russ writes the popular IP Telephony blog on ZDNet and contributes regularly to The Industry Standard blog as well. Author of seven books, Russ' latest book is Wireless Networking Made Easy.
John Yunker John Yunker is president of Byte Level Research. He closely tracks emerging wireless technologies and their impact on consumers and carriers alike. Over the years he has written a number of major reports on technologies such as Wi-Fi, WiMAX and cellular technologies.
About this blog
Unwired studies emerging wireless technologies and how they complement and conflict with one another. Technologies covered include: Wi-Fi, WiMAX, Ultra-Wideband, Zigbee, EV-DO, UMTS, HSDPA and whatever else comes along.
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Daily Wireless
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Devices
Camera Phone Report
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Ultra-Wideband (UWB)
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Unwired
October 04, 2004
UWB: Standards Be Damned; Let's Ship ProductEmail This EntryPrint This Entry
Posted by John Yunker

I attended an Ultra-Wideband (UWB) event recently and was pleased to hear the moderator, Peter Meade (editor of UWB Insider), basically say "Let's get on it with already."

UWB should have been on the market a year ago. I first wrote about the technology in January 2003 and I was told back then, by multiple vendors, to expect to see it by Christmas of that year. Well, here we are a good year later and still nothing much has changed. Now I'm hearing that we'll see product by Christmas of this year. This time I know the silicon is ready, but I'm still not holding my breath.

The vendors have been stuck in a brutal standards battle, which The Economist does a good job of documenting. I think we're all well aware of the Betamax/VHS war and how that played out and I understand that nobody wants another standards battle on their hands. But there are other technologies out there that could pose real or perceived competition to UWB, namely Wi-Fi (to be followed by WiMAX), and they are already out there.

Furthermore, there is no reason why high-end A/V components can't succeed using proprietary UWB technology. It's not the ideal solution for the customer or vendor, but I have yet to see how it will prevent sales at this tier. And assuming one standard does prevail, there is no reason that dongle-like converters can't be used on proprietary devices to solve incompatabilities. Not an elegant solution, but easier to resolve than a Betamax box than won't play VHS.

UWB is an amazing technology and at a minimum is poised to eliminate dozens of annoying UWB and video cables in every home. But it could do so much more, provided it gets going quickly.





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