Wireless USB could mean a whole new generation of wireless devices. So long wire, I knew thee well...
The future is bright for Certified Wireless USB with the announcement of six products that have passed the
USB Implementers Forum’s certification.
The products that have recently been certified include
Dell’s Inspiron 1720,
Lenovo’s ThinkPad T61/T61p, an IOGEAR Wireless USB Hub, an IOGEAR Adapter Kit, along with D-Link’s Wireless USB Adapter (DUB-1210) and 4-Port Wireless USB Hub (DUB-2240).
Collectively, these mark the first batch products to be branded Certified Wireless USB.
Certified Wireless USB 1.0 devices will send data at rates of 480Mb/sec over a distance of three meters but will drop considerably to 110Mb/sec when at the ten meter mark. The peak transfer speed is on par with the rated speed of USB 2.0 while still maintaining a speed greater than USB 1.1 over a greater distance.
The specification is also backwards compatible with previous USB versions and will allow you to use your other USB devices across the room, with an adapter of course. Future Certified Wireless USB devices will have the technology built right into the products allowing them to natively communicate between them at speeds faster than Bluetooth. Consumers can expect to see the Certified Wireless USB logo on product packaging early this Autumn.
Are you ready to embrace a world of no more wires or are you sticking to being tether down? Let us know
in the forums or in the comments box down below.
My theory here is that there is already the ability to transfer data to a device so why not.
I'll be interested to see how well it all works out though and also just how much it will cost.
Not only would it be good for thing like printers, webcams and digital cameras, it'd be brilliant for portable hard drives too - battery powered notebook drive with a W-USB adapter in it (rather than a normal 802.11x adapter).
Exciting stuff! :D
Down with wireless! Well, maybe not...but at least hold off until we can match the current speed/reliability of wired.
nope usb doesn't do networking. Firewire however does and is dead fast. Just try getting hold of firewire chips and see why usb is alot more succesfull though. (Firewire requires NDA's and licensing agreements whereas usb doesn't)
Wireless USB won't do networking, but I read somewhere earlier that one of the potential applications would be transferring the video you just recorded from your cell phone or camcorder straight to your TV. If everything that I use goes to a wireless USB connection, I would only need one USB port for my thumbdrive and could eliminate having 5 other ports currently filled (two cell phone cables, two USB mice, and a USB keyboard.)
<rant>
Actually here's hoping that wUSB is a dumb standard like normal USB is, not a "smart" one like Bluetooth. The "smart" nature is one of the things that killed the usefulness of Bluetooth; want to transfer a file? You need the FTP profile, in both devices; want to talk over a headset? You need the voice profile, in both devices; want to listen to some music? You need the audio profile, in both devices; want to print something? You need the printing profile, in both devices...
What's that? You don't have the right profile in one of the devices? Or the profiles in one of the devices have been modified ever so slightly so that they will only work with another device of that make? Well your stuffed then. No you can't get the profile from the other device, that feature was specifically engineered out of the protocol. :(
Save us from "smart" protocols. :(
</rant>
How about a wUSB headset, that would be nice. no more tangling yourself up in cables, or accidentally strangling yourself when you get up. Still no cure for the sore ear blues though. :-)
That, or start buying shares in rechargeable battery companies.
True, I have a printer with wi-fi and it just sits in one corner, while I send it print jobs from accross the room on my laptop. No need to go near the printer and hook up the usb cable. One thing I'm eager about wUSB is that the transfer rate is much faster than wi-fi... though the speed difference wouldn't matter much hehe
That'd be your fault for not putting a password on it.
Yeah that's the sort of thing, and at a not so a bad price either, however from the reviews I found when looking for the UK price this seems to be tied into "Windows Live Messenger" whatever the heck that is, and also that the sound quality is mediocre at best.
But hey if these things are already beginning to exist using companies own tech, stripping that out and fitting the wUSB gear shouldn't be too much trouble should it? That way you could have a wUSB repeater box/hub in another room to extend the range across the house.
Wikipedia entry.