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Wireless Video Transfers 100X Faster Than WiFi

Posted by Zonk on Mon Oct 22, 2007 02:19 AM
from the that's-a-lot-of-heroes dept.
coondoggie writes "Later today IBM plans to announce microprocessor chipsets that can wirelessly transmit high-definition video at extremely high speeds. 'IBM will do this by teaming with MediaTek to launch a joint initiative to develop these ultra fast chipsets.The companies will be developing millimeter wave (mmWave) radio technology — the highest frequency portion of the radio spectrum — 60 gigahertz rather than 2.4 gigahertz — and digital chipsets that enable at least 100 times higher data rates than current Wi-Fi standards.'"

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  • Walls (Score:5, Funny)

    by PineGreen (446635) on Monday October 22, @02:21AM (#21069507)
    (http://www.slosar.com/aslosar)
    First post: does it go through the walls? It's going to be difficult at these frequencies!
    • Re:Walls by Tuoqui (Score:3) Monday October 22, @02:35AM
      • Re:Walls (Score:5, Insightful)

        by evilviper (135110) on Monday October 22, @05:32AM (#21070175)
        (Last Journal: Monday October 15, @11:53PM)

        if you want to limit your WiFi to the inside of a building and such it might limit the range to an acceptable level outside where someone passing by on the road wont be able to pick up a wireless signal.

        A very bad idea. You're likely to install it in a room with a window, which it will go through with no trouble and provide a strong signal to anyone outside, while you'll still struggle to get a signal in the next room (through a wall, not a window).

        [ Parent ]
        • Re:Walls by Anonymous Coward (Score:3) Monday October 22, @05:35AM
        • Re:Walls (Score:5, Funny)

          by RadioElectric (1060098) on Monday October 22, @08:05AM (#21071059)
          Then the way to go would be to put it in one room and then knock holes in the walls for the signal to go through. Even better, if you could concentrate the signal into a smaller width of broadcast you'd need a smaller hole to fit the same signal strength through. For absoulute security and extra directional power (and thus smaller holes) you could put the signal into some kind of insulated metal rope and send it along that directly into the target device. Am I on to something here?
          [ Parent ]
          • Re:Walls (Score:4, Insightful)

            by Hatta (162192) on Monday October 22, @10:40AM (#21072859)
            (Last Journal: Monday November 28 2005, @12:21PM)
            You laugh, but it would be a lot easier to have a wireless outlet that just acts as a repeater between rooms, than to drag cables across the room and plug it into an outlet.
            [ Parent ]
          • Re:Walls by StCredZero (Score:2) Tuesday October 23, @10:06AM
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        • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
      • Re:Walls by Red Flayer (Score:3) Monday October 22, @07:24AM
      • Re:Walls by Detritus (Score:2) Tuesday October 23, @05:54AM
      • Re:Walls by Nullav (Score:2) Monday October 22, @05:47AM
      • Re:Walls by zippthorne (Score:2) Monday October 22, @12:53PM
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    • Re:Walls (Score:5, Funny)

      by Linker3000 (626634) on Monday October 22, @05:05AM (#21070095)
      I understand you get a better, more penetrating, signal using MONSTER gold-plated mm wave antennae. Apparently they produce signal waves using gold ions so any streamed video has sharper definition and crisper sound.

      There's a picture of one of these SupaAntennas here [istockphoto.com].

      The normal selling price is $99.99/pair but I can do two for only $49.99.
      [ Parent ]
      • Re:Walls by afxgrin (Score:1) Monday October 22, @02:51PM
    • Re:Walls by BESTouff (Score:2) Monday October 22, @06:11AM
      • Re:Walls by jank1887 (Score:2) Monday October 22, @07:48AM
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  • Article is shithouse - light on detail beyond belief. Check out IBM's 60GHz page. [ibm.com]

    What you want to know: Practical limitation is 10M, useless through walls.
  • Different from military application? (Score:4, Informative)

    by DigitAl56K (805623) on Monday October 22, @02:25AM (#21069525)
    (http://stage6.divx.com/)
    Is this different from the previously reported military use of millimeter wave [slashdot.org] in anything other than power? If so, what are the dangers, or is it supposedly safe?
    • by jank1887 (815982) on Monday October 22, @07:59AM (#21071007)
      difference = frequency (60GHz vs 95GHz). It's a coupling efficiency issue. One couples well to your nerve endings, creating a burning feeling, the other doesn't. It may also be safe to assume that in standard implementation, these would use omni (or near omni) antennas, not a focused beam targeted at a human target. But, the Pringles can types may have their own ideas.
      [ Parent ]
  • Hmmm (Score:5, Informative)

    by xrayspx (13127) on Monday October 22, @02:27AM (#21069537)
    (http://www.xrayspx.com/)
    Wireless Video Transfers 100X Faster Than WiFi

    Philo Farnsworth called the technology Image Dissection. I hear they get pretty bitchin' range with it too. AFAIK it now also handles HD content.
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • Line of sight only (Score:5, Insightful)

    by scsirob (246572) on Monday October 22, @02:27AM (#21069539)
    60GHz signals do not travel through walls or anything else. You can't set up a central transmitter in your house and watch HD movies elsewhere. This is nice technology to 'beam' signals across a street or to prevent wiring mess in an ad-hoc meeting room, but it won't be a real WiFi replacement
    • Re:Line of sight only by Spad (Score:2) Monday October 22, @02:38AM
    • Re:Line of sight only (Score:5, Informative)

      by femto (459605) on Monday October 22, @02:50AM (#21069629)
      (http://john.daltons.info/)
      I would modify that slightly by saying 60GHz will travel through a typical office partition (with attenuation), so it's slightly better than line of sight (ie. infrared). Bricks walls are out, you might get away with a plasterboard wall. You probably can put a 60GHz access point on the ceiling of an open plan office and get a useful signal to each desk through a combination of propagation through light partitions, reflection and directional antennas. It will save having to wire an open plan office with ethernet. I know this because I was involved in a 60GHz project, that included a propagation study, in 1995. Google for the paper "A HIGH-SPEED WIRELESS LAN", IEEE Micro, 1997.
      [ Parent ]
      • Re:Line of sight only by markov_chain (Score:2) Monday October 22, @03:56AM
        • Re:Line of sight only (Score:5, Informative)

          by femto (459605) on Monday October 22, @04:43AM (#21070011)
          (http://john.daltons.info/)
          Perhaps. As you have pointed out, MIMO relies on a "rich" multipath channel with lots of reflectors. Above 10GHz the channel starts to move towards ray propagation, reducing the amount of multipath in the channel. This might reduce the effectiveness of MIMO. I said "perhaps" because an open plan office might be a special case due to the sheer number of metallic reflectors in range. I gather some research groups are performing the relevant channel measurements, but I haven't seen the results.
          [ Parent ]
    • Re:Line of sight only by ozamosi (Score:2) Monday October 22, @02:57AM
    • Re:Line of sight only by wvmarle (Score:2) Monday October 22, @03:40AM
    • Re:Line of sight only (Score:5, Funny)

      by suv4x4 (956391) on Monday October 22, @03:57AM (#21069881)
      60GHz signals do not travel through walls or anything else. You can't set up a central transmitter in your house and watch HD movies elsewhere. This is nice technology to 'beam' signals across a street or to prevent wiring mess in an ad-hoc meeting room, but it won't be a real WiFi replacement

      Checkout my idea:

      We know power lines can carry data. So, you buy little transformer-like devices that take this wireless video signal, transform it and beam the data in the power network.

      Then you take another such transformer, and plug it in any socket at all in your house, or house around you even, which beams the data back to 60 GB wireless signal which hits your laptop, tv, console etc.

      Achieved benefits:

      1. no wires
      2. works through walls
      3. gigabits of bandwidth for your video and net
      4. potentially getting brain cancer and dying young, but that's not important.

      Well, what do you think? Can we file a patent here or what?
      [ Parent ]
    • Re:Line of sight only by CastrTroy (Score:2) Monday October 22, @08:11AM
    • Re:Line of sight only by Ant P. (Score:1) Monday October 22, @09:53AM
  • Why? (Score:1)

    by bpjk (305635) on Monday October 22, @02:27AM (#21069541)
    At that frequency, the signal wouldn't penetrate walls very well, would it?
    • Re:Why? (Score:4, Informative)

      by jon287 (977520) on Monday October 22, @02:34AM (#21069557)

      At that frequency, the signal wouldn't penetrate walls very well, would it?


      At that frequency, the signal wouldn't penetrate PAPER very well. You can think of it (nearly correctly) as a very weak flashlight beam, much like a regular old TV remote. Only lots more picky about everything being just right.
      [ Parent ]
  • Not *that* fast (Score:5, Informative)

    by egarland (120202) on Monday October 22, @02:37AM (#21069573)
    Since Wi-Fi is generally 11-54 mbit they're only talking 1-5 gbit. The mentioned use is for video so it sounds like they are trying to connect displays to devices that generate output, i.e. replacing a monitor cable. For comparison DVI is 3.7 gbit, DVI-D 7.4. Most likely they are talking about the 1-2 gbit range since if it was in the 5gbit range they'd probably have said so instead of 100x wifi. That data rate would only be useful for low-resolution displays like HDTVs, not for general purpose computer monitor use. The devices would likely need to be close to each other due to the high frequencies. It sounds like they may be targeting removing the cable requirements home theater systems or something similar.

    Personally.. I like cables for hooking up video. Wireless is buggy, snoopable, power hungry, and hard to set up (with 4 transmitters and 4 receivers, how to you configure what displays where?) Cables, while bulky and sometimes annoying have an incredibly easy UI. Plug one end here, the other end there, the things are connected. Want to change it? plug the wire in somewhere else.
  • Errrrr (Score:4, Funny)

    by Zouden (232738) on Monday October 22, @02:40AM (#21069579)
    Isn't millimeter wave the technology in the pain-inducing raygun?

    Perhaps this is helps reduce the interference... no pesky animals between the transmitter and receiver!
    • Re:Errrrr by deander2 (Score:2) Monday October 22, @04:29AM
    • Re:Errrrr by edwardpickman (Score:2) Monday October 22, @05:05AM
  • And how fast... (Score:1, Troll)

    by G-News.ch (793321) on Monday October 22, @02:46AM (#21069609)
    (http://www.g-news.ch/ | Last Journal: Thursday January 27 2005, @04:59AM)
    ...will it fry your brains this time? We already know WiFi and RFID are harmful to some extent, how bad will it be with even shorter wavelengths?
  • Nifty.. (Score:2, Interesting)

    by scoot80 (1017822) on Monday October 22, @03:00AM (#21069667)
    (Last Journal: Tuesday September 18, @02:29AM)
    This is not going to replace WiFi, nor it is probably supposed to. However for applications such as wireless monitors/sound systems and anything else which is going to be in close vicinity to the transmitter, but requires high bandwidth, it might be useful. Do we see a super resolution wireless gaming mouse coming out soon??

  • Post and Article a little misleading (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Bigjeff5 (1143585) on Monday October 22, @03:12AM (#21069705)
    They both seem to give the impression that the 60ghz wireless is a step up from WiFi, which it is not. It's more like a step up from your USB cable to a wireless equivalent. It will never be used for networking computers for the same reason USB cables will never be used for networking. They have a few severe limitations that prevent this from ever happening. The biggest problem is the fact that ANYTHING in the way blocks the signal. It can't even penetrate skin more than a millimeter or so as far as I know.

    The real deal is this is going to make things like video cables and other short connections to computers and devices pretty much obsolete. I personally can't wait till you can stack a few stereo, video, and game devices on top of each other, plug them into the wall, turn them on and they all connect together. Combine this with the wireless power that's going to be coming out in a few years, and things are gonna be pretty pimpin.
  • Cancer risk? (Score:2)

    by DoofusOfDeath (636671) on Monday October 22, @03:20AM (#21069717)
    I'm under the impression that the higher the frequency, the greater the risk of cancer because the transmissions pack more energy.

    Is that true? Or do only certain frequencies cause cancer?
    • Re:Cancer risk? by timmarhy (Score:1) Monday October 22, @03:43AM
      • Re:Cancer risk? (Score:5, Informative)

        by fnj (64210) on Monday October 22, @05:28AM (#21070155)
        You're right that frequency and power are different. Mutations require ionizing radiation; basically alpha/beta/gamma rays, neutrons, cosmic rays, etc. Well into the ultraviolet is about the lowest frequency that can be mutationally dangerous - somewhere around 10E-8 m, or thousands of times higher frequency than millimeter wave RF.

        All millimeter wave RF can do is heat objects. It can do this promptly and well below the surface. With enough power, it can kill you pretty quickly by simple heating, but that's all. With a well focused beam, your brain could be literally cooked basically before you notice it. But practically speaking there is no intensity or duration of microwaves that causes mutations.
        [ Parent ]
        • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
      • Re:Cancer risk? by Anonymous Coward (Score:1) Monday October 22, @05:45AM
      • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
    • Re:Cancer risk? by m2943 (Score:2) Monday October 22, @05:28AM
    • Re:Cancer risk? by Eivind (Score:3) Monday October 22, @05:30AM
    • Re:Cancer risk? by Hatta (Score:2) Monday October 22, @10:47AM
  • Sources (Score:1)

    by G-News.ch (793321) on Monday October 22, @03:48AM (#21069839)
    (http://www.g-news.ch/ | Last Journal: Thursday January 27 2005, @04:59AM)
    http://capitalpress.com/Main.asp?SectionID=94&ArticleID=35165 [capitalpress.com] http://crunchgear.com/2007/05/21/dangers-of-wi-fi-should-be-reevaluated-possibly-more-harmful-than-previosuly-indicated/ [crunchgear.com] And about a zillion other articles debating the harmfulness of all the various wireless technologies. Of course you will always find a study that counters the previous one. Still, things like cellphones heating up body tissue are undebatable, long time studies aren't available for modern technologies, for obvious reasons.
  • Hopefully, (Score:1)

    by Fengpost (907072) on Monday October 22, @04:26AM (#21069955)
    Let's just hope that this wireless solution is cheaper than the ridiculous pricing of the HDMI cable out there, because the only purpose of this solution is to replace the HDMI cable.
  • Lawsuit Ahoy!..... (Score:1)

    by IHC Navistar (967161) on Monday October 22, @05:43AM (#21070223)
    Chipsets emitting wireless signals?

    I'll bet that not too long after they start putting these chipsets in laptops, some idiot will sue IBM saying that the chip signal radiation made him impotent.

    Hey, it's AMERICA..... People actually do stuff like that.

    However, for those that want protection from the signal radiation, I *do* carry lead underwear. If you are worried about overheating/exploding batteries, check out my line of asestos/kevlar-blend undergarments.
  • Excuse my ignorance, but how is this different from / better than TV?

  • by professorguy (1108737) on Monday October 22, @09:33AM (#21071963)
    OK, higher frequency generally means higher bandwidth, I get it. But how does this get translated into "wireless for video?"

    When we upgraded to 100Mb ethernet, we didn't say that was "for porn." It was for whatever happened to be on the pipe. Why is this different? It's a fatter pipe. It will be used for video, sure, but can't it be used for, I don't know, any DATA?

    Check out my new 1Gb network connection. I've got the new chipset specially made "for downloading cake recipes." Hope they've got another chipset waiting in the wings when I want to download cookie recipes.

  • Man, I totally blew it, setting up the house networking equipment in house we're building (ordered Apple WAP and Netgear Gig switch; ran Cat6 cable to main rooms). I might end up losing a geek ranking if this gets out on the web.
  • Riddle me this (Score:1)

    by Techx9 (1170143) on Monday October 22, @10:42AM (#21072887)
    I really can't wait for the day when HDTV can be beamed directly into our brains, similar to what was depicted in batman with Jim Carrey as the Riddler. We can then be mindless slaves to the almighty broadcast systems of the future.
  • by Iowan41 (1139959) on Monday October 22, @10:52AM (#21073005)
    Except it had a greater range. This wouldn't be the first time that IBM's left hand didn't know what its right hand was doing. Timing suggests a manager who didn't want to get her budget cut for next year.
  • There's no need to go to 60 GHz for this. Amimon [amimon.com] already has a chipset that transmits low latency HD video on the 5GHz unlicensed band. It uses a combination of MIMO [wikipedia.org] and Joint Source-Channel Coding [utdallas.edu].
  • by Bob-taro (996889) on Monday October 22, @02:52PM (#21076175)
    Isn't this the same frequency range [wikipedia.org] that let's you see through clothes? And it's specifically for transmitting hd video?
  • Offtopic Question (Score:1)

    by AP31R0N (723649) on Tuesday October 23, @07:33AM (#21083449)
    Why do they call it Wireless Fidelity? Fidelity isn't really the issue. In the term HiFi, fidelity was significant because high fidelity was novel at the time. HiFi systems had higher fidelity than previous systems. So is the use of fidelity meaningful, or just to hijack the sound of familiar term?
  • Re:How to practically implement (Score:3, Informative)

    by Technician (215283) on Monday October 22, @05:03AM (#21070091)
    Hence, you put a slim, shielded tube over the distance you want to transfer. At each end of the tube is a transmitter/receiver. With further research it might even be possible to bend these tubes, so they go around corners etc. This would solve all the problems identified.


    This tube has a name and has been in existance for many years. It's called a waveguide.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Waveguide [wikipedia.org]
    http://www.microwaves101.com/encyclopedia/waveguide.cfm [microwaves101.com]

    Drawings of some waveguides are here;
    http://www.uniquesys.com/products/passive/waveguides/s111_2.html?gclid=COyF1u6coo8CFSI4YAod20h_aQ [uniquesys.com]

    You can buy eliptical waveguide here for frequencies up to about 22 GHZ.
    http://antennasystems.com/ewassy.html [antennasystems.com]
    and rectangular waveguide up to 40 GHZ here.
    http://www.antennasystems.com/waveguide.html [antennasystems.com]
    [ Parent ]
  • Re:mo3 0p (Score:2)

    by xSauronx (608805) <xsauronxdamnitNO@SPAMgmail.com> on Monday October 22, @05:57AM (#21070279)
    its a very complicated, and new, technology. you may recall, if you read their blurb on what hardware and software the site runs on, that they still use RH9 on some boxes. Obviously theyre too far behind for "filtering" of any sort....
    [ Parent ]
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