Showing posts with label WiFi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label WiFi. Show all posts
Tuesday, August 29, 2017
Linksys WRT32X AC3200 Dual-Band WiFi Gaming Router
Linksys has unveiled their latest dual-band WiFi gaming router namely the WRT32X AC3200. Equipped with four external adjustable antennas (w/ MU-MIMO technology), this gaming router is configured with a 1.8GHz dual-core processor, a 512MB DDR3 RAM, a 256MB flash memory, 1x Gigabit Ethernet WAN port, 4x Gigabit Ethernet LAN ports, 1x USB 3.0 port and 1x USB 2.0/eSATA combo ports for your printers and storage devices.
Built with Killer Prioritization Engine – enables it to synchronize with Killer-enabled PCs to reduce peak ping times by 77% and deliver smooth, lag-free gaming, the WRT32X AC3200 provides dual-band wireless network support (N600 on the 2.4GHz and AC2600 on the 5GHz band) through the AC3200 802.11ac Wave 2 dual-band 3 x 3 wireless radio.
The Linksys WRT32X AC3200 is currently available for pre-order for $299.99. [Product Page]
source: techfresh.net
Sunday, May 15, 2016
Germany eyes free wi-fi in public spaces, finally
BERLIN, Germany — Try looking for a free wi-fi connection in the cafe down the street in Germany and, more likely than not, there isn’t one.
Forget about looking for open connections in parks or at key monuments. They just don’t exist.
In an age when almost everyone carries a smartphone, the absence of such free hotspots can appear to be an aberration in a country that is known for its technological prowess.
But a new government deal may change all that, as it aims to tackle the root of the problem — by exonerating the connection’s provider of fraudulent usage by others.
The snag has been Germany’s tough rules to crack down on online piracy, with high fines for illegally downloading music and films.
No one wants to run the risk of exposing their wi-fi connection to possible misuse, a fear that has turned Germany into a hotspot desert.
A 2014 study by Eco, a federation of Internet professionals, found that there are only two open hotspots for every 100,000 residents in Germany, compared to 10 in Sweden and 29 in Britain.
For many, that is a stumbling block in the development of the Internet, an obstacle Chancellor Angela Merkel’s government wants to mow down.
But seeking an agreement took months of tough negotiations.
“A late but important step,” said Justice Minister Heiko Maas on Twitter.
‘Liberation’
According to the agreement reached this week within Merkel’s left-right ‘grand coalition’ government, the law will be amended so that “wi-fi providers would be considered like access providers” — that is to say, they are waived from all responsibility of users, and “will not be subject to any required checks”.
That is valid for anyone who offers their wi-fi access to others for free — be it a restaurant owner who allows clients to connect online or the friendly guy who gives his neighbor the password to get on his Internet access.
Only 39 percent of Internet users in Germany go online using wi-fi outside of their homes, according to a survey in 2015 by Bitkom, the German high-technology federation.
Plans by the government to amend the rule “will facilitate things for both operators and users,” said Bernhard Rohleder, who heads Bitkom.
For the federation Eco, it spells the end of the “great wall” to the development of hotspots in Germany, while hotels describe the move as an act of liberation.
But not all are happy.
The music industry federation fears that it could hurt creators and artists, and warned that it has “opened the doors and windows to illegal usage”.
A draft law prepared in September by Economy Minister Sigmar Gabriel had required users to confirm that they are not doing anything illegal online, as well as for access providers to secure the network with passwords.
But that was deemed too restrictive, leading to the current agreement which scraps these conditions.
The proposal is due to be examined by cabinet before it is put to parliament, it is therefore not expected to come in force before the autumn.
source: technology.inquirer.net
Monday, April 2, 2012
Australian WiFi inventors win US legal battle
SYDNEY—Australian government science body CSIRO said Sunday it had won a multi-million-dollar legal settlement in the United States to license its patented technology that underpins the WiFi platform worldwide.
Scientists from the agency invented the wireless local area network (WLAN) technology that is the basis of the WiFi signal employed by computers, smartphones and other Internet-ready devices around the world.
The Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) patented the technology in the 1990s, and has been suing companies using it without a licence since 2005.
In 2009, CSIRO recouped Aus$205 million (US$212 million) after settling cases against 14 companies. The agency said it had now been awarded a further Aus$220 million after reaching agreements with 23 more firms.
Australian Minister for Science and Research Chris Evans said in a statement that it was an important battle to win.
“It was important that Australia protect its intellectual property, and that those major companies who are selling billions of devices pay for the technology that they were using,” he said.
Nigel Poole, a senior executive at CSIRO, said the agency was delighted with the result.
“CSIRO’s commercial and legal teams on both sides of the Pacific have worked very hard over the past several years to gain a reasonable return and I would like to pay particular tribute to them for their extraordinary efforts,” he said.
“Of course, it was the inventors, led by Dr John O’Sullivan, whose brilliance in the 1990s made all this possible.”
The invention came out of CSIRO’s pioneering work in radioastronomy, with a team of its scientists cracking the problem of radio waves bouncing off surfaces indoors, causing an echo that distorts the signal.
They overcame it by building a fast chip that could transmit a signal while reducing the echo, beating many of the major communications companies around the world that were trying to solve the same issue.
source: http://technology.inquirer.net/9545/australian-wifi-inventors-win-us-legal-battle
Scientists from the agency invented the wireless local area network (WLAN) technology that is the basis of the WiFi signal employed by computers, smartphones and other Internet-ready devices around the world.
The Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) patented the technology in the 1990s, and has been suing companies using it without a licence since 2005.
In 2009, CSIRO recouped Aus$205 million (US$212 million) after settling cases against 14 companies. The agency said it had now been awarded a further Aus$220 million after reaching agreements with 23 more firms.
Australian Minister for Science and Research Chris Evans said in a statement that it was an important battle to win.
“It was important that Australia protect its intellectual property, and that those major companies who are selling billions of devices pay for the technology that they were using,” he said.
Nigel Poole, a senior executive at CSIRO, said the agency was delighted with the result.
“CSIRO’s commercial and legal teams on both sides of the Pacific have worked very hard over the past several years to gain a reasonable return and I would like to pay particular tribute to them for their extraordinary efforts,” he said.
“Of course, it was the inventors, led by Dr John O’Sullivan, whose brilliance in the 1990s made all this possible.”
The invention came out of CSIRO’s pioneering work in radioastronomy, with a team of its scientists cracking the problem of radio waves bouncing off surfaces indoors, causing an echo that distorts the signal.
They overcame it by building a fast chip that could transmit a signal while reducing the echo, beating many of the major communications companies around the world that were trying to solve the same issue.
source: http://technology.inquirer.net/9545/australian-wifi-inventors-win-us-legal-battle
Labels:
Australia,
CSIRO,
Internet,
Technology,
United States,
WiFi,
WiFi Platform,
WLAN
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