Similar Articles |
|
Home Toys April 2005 Raoul Wijgergangs |
Making Sense of Today's Home Control Technologies The Z-Wave protocol is designed for residential control systems. Typically these systems have between five and two hundred plus nodes, distributed around the home and garden. The system is designed for easy installation because homeowners install and manage the system themselves. |
Home Toys December 2004 Raoul Wijgergangs |
Realizing the Promise of the Connected Home Z-Wave is delivering on the promise of the connected home with a chip the size of a dime. Its low-cost wireless mesh network communications technology enables consumers to monitor and manage their lights, thermostats, garage door openers, smoke detectors, security systems and other home control products. |
Home Toys June 2002 Svein Anders Tunheim |
Wireless home automation systems require low-cost and low-power RF-IC solutions The CC1000 transceiver offers an outstanding solution to the most demanding home automation systems which typically require very low power consumption and very low cost. |
Home Toys June 2006 Lew Brown |
A New Standard for Home Control Products Entering a dark home is already a thing of the past for many people thanks to a technology called Z-Wave. One press of a button on an in-car remote illuminates the front walkway, turns on the kitchen and hall lights, unlocks the front door and turns on the stereo. |
Home Toys August 2003 |
Low cost wireless communication at 2.4GHz in consumer and industrial products The nRF24xx family has already been incorporated in a number of new and existing wireless global applications such as sensor, remote control, mouse, game controllers, tire pressure sensors and intelligent sports equipment applications. |
Home Toys February 2005 Thanh Nguyen |
What is the LCN Installation Bus? The installation bus is a new way to electrically wire buildings that is more cost effective and offers many new functionalities over the conventional method. The LCN installation bus distinguishes itself through performance and cost effectiveness compared to the rest. |
Home Toys August 2004 Tunheim & Braathen |
A Single-Chip 2.4 GHz RF Transceiver Compliant with IEEE 802.15.4 and Ready to be Used in ZigBee Solutions The CC2420 makes an excellent fit for IEEE 802.15.4/ZigBee products tageted by home and building automation, industrial monitoring and control and wireless sensor networks applications. |
Food Engineering February 1, 2009 Wayne Labs |
Tech Update: Wireless Networks Provide Critical Measures Applications for wireless sensors in manufacturing are as vast as the imagination can create. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics June 2005 John McHale |
RF and Microwave Technology Enable Networking on the Move Designers of RF and microwave technology say low power and small size remain the trend in product designs. Meanwhile, integrators adapt and combine RF and microwave technologies to enable networking on the move. |
InternetNews August 9, 2004 Michael Singer |
Mesh Networks to Boost Energy A new project looks to improve U.S. electric power plant production through the use of wireless mesh sensor networks. |
PC Magazine February 5, 2009 Eric Griffith |
After 11n: The Future of Wireless Home Networking Wi-Fi's immediate and distant future hold improvements to ad hoc connections, 802.11s (and 11z!), and more. Here's what you need to know. |
IEEE Spectrum April 2009 Koch & Prasad |
The Universal Handset Software-defined radio will let cellphones speak Wi-Fi, 3G, WiMax, and more. |
PC Magazine October 5, 2004 Bill Howard |
Home Automation that Works Zensys Z-Wave, a 908.4-MHz, UPnP-compliant mesh-networking protocol, is a home automation system that really works. |
Home Toys February 2006 Brett Griffin |
Intermingling X-10 and New Lighting Technologies in Your Home Many X-10 users will want to intermingle few UPB or other RF capable switches at first, migrating their homes over a few years, spreading the cost out. |
Home Toys April 2004 |
Home Technology Integration The objective of this article is to provide you with a primer regarding the issues that must be considered when contemplating the installation of a Home Automation System. |
D-Lib Nov/Dec 2015 Van de Sompel & Nelson |
Reminiscing About 15 Years of Interoperability Efforts Over the past fifteen years, our perspective on tackling information interoperability problems for web-based scholarship has evolved significantly. |
Entrepreneur May 2004 Amanda C. Kooser |
The Mesh Pit Taking wireless networks to the next level. |
Technology Research News July 2, 2003 |
Big sites hoard links University of London researchers have uncovered another clue about the Internet's structure -- the rich-club phenomenon. Large, well-connected nodes have more links to each other than to smaller nodes, and smaller nodes have more links to the larger nodes than to each other. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics August 2004 J.R. Wilson |
RF and Microwave Industry Struggles to Meet the High Demands of the Military Defense and homeland-security users of radio frequency (RF)/microwave products have demanding and unique needs that the commercial market can fulfill only rarely, which shines the spotlight on this area of a U.S. military that is starved for research and development money. |
Technology Research News September 8, 2004 Kimberly Patch |
Simple Search Lightens Net Load Researchers working on finding better ways to search the Internet are increasingly turning to methods that require individual nodes, or servers, to know a little bit about nearby servers, but don't require servers to look much beyond their own neighborhoods. |
Linux Journal September 28, 2005 Ron Minnich |
The Ultimate Linux Lunchbox In this article, we describe the construction of a 16-node cluster that runs from a single IBM ThinkPad power supply. To use the lunchbox with your laptop, you merely need to plug the Ethernet cable in to the laptop and supply appropriate power -- even the power available in an airplane seat will do. |
PC Magazine November 2, 2004 Troy Dreier |
Your Automated Home Control your household appliances from a PC, over the Web, or via remote. We review four starter packages. |
This Old House Eric Hagerman |
Say What? Translating Smart-Home Geek Speak From Apple HomeKit to Z-Wave, common smart-home jargon is demystified. |
PC Magazine August 17, 2004 Bill Howard |
Geek-Free Home Automation One of life's ironies is that those of us who can dim the living-room lights and switch the stereo to soft jazz at the press of a single button are probably the geeks who can't get a date and take advantage of the romantic atmosphere. |
Home Toys June 2002 Giovanni Cardamone |
Remote Keyless Entry Reference Design The purpose of the Motorola RKE Reference Design is to help embedded system engineers develop RF-based products more quickly. By providing engineers with electrical schematics, hardware recommendations, software and training materials, Motorola greatly reduces the development cycle. |
Home Toys February 2005 |
Node Zero Gallery Node Zero (N0) is the area in the house where all the cables come together. Here is a selection of readers' N0s. |
JavaWorld June 13, 2003 Jeff Friesen |
Datastructures and algorithms, Part 2 This article concludes a two-part series that explores two important computer science topics: datastructures and algorithms. |
InternetNews January 14, 2005 Eric Griffith |
Z-Wave Wants to Be Your Standard The battle for wireless home control is on, as Zensys prepares to open up access to its wireless technology in the wake of ZigBee 1.0's arrival. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics October 2005 Steffen Koehler |
Advances in hybrid optical packaging enable high-bandwidth photonic RF transmission The challenge in exploiting optical fiber for RF transmission lies in getting the RF signals on and off the fiber without degrading the signals. Advances in optical packaging technology are making improvements to military equipment possible. |
Technology Research News July 2, 2003 Kimberly Patch |
Study reveals Net's parts The Internet is rooted in the geopolitical boundaries of the real world -- its natural organization includes groupings that conform largely to national borders. Spaces between groupings are Internet fault lines that reveal where the global network is most vulnerable to splitting. apart. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics June 2006 Courtney E. Howard |
Attention Turns to RF and Microwave Test and Measurement Federal programs, industry consortia, and engineers advance RF and microwave technologies to ensure their accuracy and reliability. |
InternetNews December 1, 2008 Henry Newman |
Tips on Storage Architecture for E-Discovery E-Discovery systems pose unique challenges for storage architects if they want to keep up with data growth, performance and backup and recovery demands. |
Linux Journal May 1, 2002 Glen Otero |
The Beowulf State of Mind Beowulf has grown into the poster child for open-source, clustered computing. The Beowulf concept is all about using standard vanilla boxes and open-source software to cluster a group of computers together into a virtual supercomputer... |
IEEE Spectrum November 2012 Rachel Courtland |
Wi-Fi Radio Takes a Digital Turn Intel's new transceiver pushes RF circuitry further into the digital realm, but will it make it out of the lab? |
PC Magazine September 21, 2004 Sebastian Rupley |
A Moveable Mesh One of the last places you would expect to find cutting-edge technology is inside a city bus. But the bus system in Portsmouth, England, is an exception. |
PC Magazine February 11, 2004 Bill Howard |
No Cords, No Hassles Wireless begets wireless. Once you cut the cord on a couple of devices, you want to cut them all. Here are half a dozen wireless technologies you'll want to take advantage of. |