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

openspectrum.info logo

NEWS

ABI Research: UWB shipments to reach 300 million in 2011

From Nikkei Electronics Asia, 24 May:

"Several formidable-looking barriers appear, at first glance, to pose serious obstacles to widespread commercial success for ultra-wideband (UWB). But closer examination reveals that few of them will drastically inhibit the market, which a new ABI Research study forecasts will see nearly 300 million UWB shipments in 2011.

"According to principal analyst Stuart Carlaw, some observers have pointed to the lack of standardization as a major barrier to growth in the UWB market. 'The collapse of the UWB standards process was widely seen as a major faux pas,' he noted, 'but those inside the industry viewed it as the shackles being removed.'

"Similarly, many people point to 802.11n as 'the UWB-killer'. The reality is that they are complementary. UWB's relationship to 802.11n may be compared to USB's relationship to Ethernet. Although that is an oversimplification, said Carlaw, 'It is clear that UWB and 802.11n will co-exist and be powerful allies for each other.'

"None of this is to say that no factors threaten UWB's success. Issues around global spectrum and regulatory approval, along with the need to drive down cost, power consumption and silicon package sizes, are all legitimate concerns that need to be addressed. There is a need to find global regulatory approval and common frequency allocations. In ABI Research's analysis, this is the real key to the UWB question. All signs are that the band between 7 and 8.5GHz will be common across all regions. The European Communications Commission (ECC) has recently announced support for the 6 to 8.5GHz band, while Japan looks set to ratify the 7 to 10GHz band.

"The recent announcement of the Bluetooth SIG's support for the WiMedia Alliance will also assist the drive for global regulatory approval, since the SIG has had success in doing this for its 2.4GHz solutions. It's worth noting that global regulatory endorsement is not a precursor to success, and that Bluetooth gained a lot of ground before receiving general regulatory approval."

[: 25 May 2006]

Click here for the LATEST HEADLINES

Recent News...

RFID criticized by US Dept. of Homeland Security subcommittee (25 May)

Bluetooth profile for medical devices due in 2007 (24 May)

802.11n standard to split into fixed, mobile versions? (22 May)

WiFi partly de-licensed in Kyrgyzstan (22 May)

License exempt RF enables localised services: new book, online forum, conference (21 May)

"Affluent early adopters" prefer home WiFi - survey (11 May)

The developing 802.11s wireless mesh standard (11 May)

"AT&T and MobiTV to provide live TV via WiFi hot spots" (10 May)

Report on Software-Defined Radio for Public Safety (8 May)

UWB radar detects buried victims' breathing (8 May)

"RF switch" integrates wireless technologies (8 May)

Wireless sensors monitor and "learn" patterns of behavior for senior home care (8 May)

"The RFID Hacking Underground" (6 May)

Questionaire and Workshop Presentations on Wireless Commons (4 May)

Gigabit UWB for whole-house multimedia (2 May)

"RFID tags used to teach English" (2 May)

RFID Privacy Best Practices Guide (2 May)

"RFID 'Til the Cows Come Home" (25 April)

Developing smart, flexible radios: unsolved problems come into focus (25 April)

Rain/freeze sensor controls irrigation wirelessly (25 April)

"Vision Goes Wireless" (21 April)

Workshop on the collective use of spectrum (Brussels, 27 April) (21 April)

Industrial "Wireless Users Summit" (21 April)

The Forecast Umbrella (17 April)

Austrian highways to get wireless Internet (17 April)

Smart Radio Challenge (14 April)

"World's First RFID-Enabled Arcade Games" (13 April)

RFID tags susceptible to DoS attacks, data-rewrites (12 April)

3 European consultations on license exempt radio (10 April)

"A Single Chipset for Global UWB" (7 April)

Wireless sensor nets make infrastructure smarter (7 April)

Spread Spectrum: Hedy Lamarr and the Mobile Phone (7 April)

RFID-enabled bins track trash by household (6 April)

More pressure for license exempt use of empty TV channels (6 April)

"Cellular WiFi" for mobile/municipal coverage (5 April)

Is wireless creating "an environment of tyranny?" (5 April)

Visit our News Archive for additional stories.

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

(Email subscriptions managed by FeedBurner)