Brought to you as a public service of the Open Spectrum Foundation (Stichting Open Spectrum), Amsterdam - Prague

openspectrum.info logo

NEWS

European rules for UWB decided

From "Commission takes important step towards a single market for next generation wireless devices," EC press release IP/07/213, 21 February:

"A single market for a new generation of mass-market consumer electronics (laptops, mobile phones, digital cameras, TVs), that can exchange data wirelessly at very high rates over short distances is a step closer.

"The Commission Decision adopted today outlines the mandatory conditions for using ultra-wideband (UWB) technology in these next generation wireless devices all across the European Union.

" 'By removing the cables that link the electronic devices we use in everyday life, ultra-wideband technology can extend the Information Society in many areas of society,' said EU Telecoms and Media Commissioner Viviane Reding. 'However, to benefit our citizens, it is important that we establish a functioning single market for these devices in the European Union. By adopting a harmonising decision today, the Commission allows innovators to use this new technology throughout the EU, while ensuring no interference takes place with other wireless users.'

"UWB devices can transmit data at very high rates by 'spreading' the signal over very broad ranges of the radio spectrum. With rates comparable to devices connected by cable, UWB is an attractive technology for the increasingly bandwidth-hungry consumer electronics industry.

"While the spectrum is already used by many sectors (such as mobile operators, broadcasters and the aviation community), the extremely low transmission powers of UWB signals ensure that harmful interference with these applications is avoided.

"With UWB, many electronic devices so far linked by cable, will have a wireless alternative offering the same data rates (up to 480 Mbit/s or the speed of USB wired connections available today). Devices will therefore be able to seamlessly 'speak' to each other whenever in range. UWB will provide this ease-of-use to users while operating in the existing spectrum, which is currently a scarce and often very expensive resource.

"This Decision is a concrete measure implementing the Commission's strategy to make the use of the radio spectrum in the European Union more flexible and more efficient (see IP/05/1199).

"The technical conditions in this Decision, which must be applied within the next six months throughout the EU's 27 Member States, were developed following extensive compatibility studies between UWB and all other spectrum users that could potentially have been affected. The studies were done by the European Conference of Postal and Telecommunications Administrations (CEPT) for the Commission."
________

See also MEMO/07/72: "The European Commission's Decision on Ultra-Wideband Technologies: Frequently Asked Questions".

[ - 21 February 2007]

Click here for the LATEST HEADLINES

Recent News...

SDR Forum, DySPAN 2007 dovetail in Dublin in April (21 February 2007)

Hitachi develops speck-of-dust size RFID tags (19 February 2007)

Open-source smartphone, with WiFi in version 2 (16 February 2007)

"Human interface devices" migrating to 2.4GHz (16 February 2007)

Ecma developing standard for the 60GHz band (15 February 2007)

Details emerge about Microsoft's "cognitive" radio for broadband in TV white-spaces (14 February 2007)

"Deregulating Spectrum" by Lawrence Lessig (14 February 2007)

"How the death of TV sets could change mobile computing" (14 February 2007)

Edible, decaying, "intentionally fragile" RFID (14 February 2007)

Jonah Brucker-Cohen's "WiFi Liberator" (11 February 2007)

Riyadh may be 1st city in Middle East covered by free WiFi (11 February 2007)

Germany sees RFID as key to tech leadership (11 February 2007)

FCC affirms preference for unlicensed use of empty TV channels 4 February 2007)

"Unprecedented" BT-FON deal in the works? (4 February 2007)

Cover cities with mesh WiFi not WiMAX, says NY Times (4 February 2007)

Huge public RFID sensor mesh proposed in Australia (2 February 2007)

Bénin suspends WiFi, WiMAX and WLL authorizations in crackdown on "telecom anarchy" (31 January 2007)

1300% growth in Voice-over-WiFi handset sales (2007-2010), Infonetics predicts (31 January 2007)

Is radio spectrum the oil of the 21st century? (31 January 2007)

Vanu's AnyWave SDR a 2007 tech winner (31 January 2007)

Wireless heart implant enables remote monitoring (31 January 2007)

Hotspot log-on service for browserless WiFi devices (30 January 2007)

Researchers slash RFID reader cost, size (30 January 2007)

Whisher to compete with Fon (30 January 2007)

We interrupt our usual opposition to licensing to suggest it for heat-ray weapons (30 January 2007)

Industrial robot controlled by Wii, Bluetooth (30 January 2007)

RFID-tagged wasps reveal family secrets (28 January 2007)

RF pulses at 890 kHz detect explosives (28 January 2007)

First meeting of RuBee standards group this February (28 January 2007)

Beware of fake "Free WiFi" hotspots, especially in US airports (26 January 2007)

Tests show muni-WiFi beating 3G in North America (26 January 2007)

WiFi links waiters, kitchen to streamline restaurant work (26 January 2007)

Agreement on Bluetooth/WiFi protection leads to 802.11n draft (26 January 2007)

Radio spectrum: state property or universal heritage of mankind? (21 January 2007)

RFID in India (19 January 2007)

Prison for misuse of Bluetooth proposed in Bahrain (19 January 2007)

ITU Workshop on Market Mechanisms for Spectrum Management (18 January 2007)

GPS-Bluetooth integration to boost locative services (18 January 2007)

UWB can complement WiFi, reduce 2.4GHz congestion (18 January 2007)

Wireless Communications: The Future by William Webb (18 January 2007)

"Energy inefficiency could kill pure cellular" (16 January 2007)

Portable WiFi music downloaders debut at CES (12 January 2007)

RFID ink injections for tracking meat, lasers for detecting rot (11 January 2007)

Prague getting 'several hundred' free (ad-supported) hotspots (11 January 2007)

iriver W10 unveiled at CES: the first location-aware Personal Media Player (11 January 2007)

VoWiFi mesh test lets coal-miners make first phonecalls from 300m underground (10 January 2007)

Digital Divide closed in Chile's first "WiFi town," Salamanca (8 January 2007)

Automobile wireless shifts into high gear (8 January 2007)

600MB/s data transfers via concurrent use of 2.4 and 5GHz bands (7 January 2007)

Samsung developing RFID-aware refrigerator (5 January 2007)

Automobile router turns car into mobile WiFi hotspot (3 January 2007)

Visit our News Archive for additional stories.

To receive the openspectrum.info newsfeed by email, enter your email address:

(Email subscriptions managed by FeedBurner)