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Amazon.com: Actiontec MWTV2KIT01 MyWirelessTV2 Wireless HD Video ...
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WirelessHD, also known as UltraGig, is a proprietary standard owned by Silicon Image (originally SiBeam) for wireless transmission of high-definition video content for consumer electronics products. The consortium currently has over 40 adopters; key members behind the specification include Broadcom, Intel, LG, Panasonic, NEC, Samsung, SiBEAM, Sony, Philips and Toshiba. The founders intend the technology to be used for Consumer Electronic devices, PCs, and portable devices.

The specification was finalized in January 2008.


Video WirelessHD



Technology

The WirelessHD specification is based on a 7 GHz channel in the 60 GHz Extremely High Frequency radio band. It allows either lightly compressed (proprietary wireless link-aware codec) or uncompressed digital transmission of high-definition video and audio and data signals, essentially making it equivalent of a wireless HDMI. First-generation implementation achieves data rates from 4 Gbit/s, but the core technology allows theoretical data rates as high as 25 Gbit/s (compared to 10.2 Gbit/s for HDMI 1.3 and 21.6 Gbit/s for DisplayPort 1.2), permitting WirelessHD to scale to higher resolutions, color depth, and range. The 1.1 version of the specification increases the maximum data rate to 28 Gbit/s, supports common 3D formats, 4K resolution, WPAN data, low-power mode for portable devices, and HDCP 2.0 content protection.

The 60 GHz band usually requires line of sight between transmitter and receiver, and the WirelessHD specification ameliorates this limitation through the use of beam forming at the receiver and transmitter antennas to increase the signal's effective radiated power, find the best path, and utilise wall reflections. The goal range for the first products will be in-room, point-to-point, non line-of-sight (NLOS) at up to 10 meters. The atmospheric absorption of 60 GHz energy by oxygen molecules limits undesired propagation over long distances and helps control intersystem interference and long distance reception, which is a concern to video copyright owners.

The WirelessHD specification has provisions for content encryption via Digital Transmission Content Protection (DTCP) as well as provisions for network management. A standard remote control allows users to control the WirelessHD devices and choose which device will act as the source for the display.


Maps WirelessHD



Competition

WirelessHD competes with WiGig in some applications. WiGig transmits in the same 60 GHz band used by WirelessHD.


WirelessHD 1.0 spec announced - Pocket-lint
src: cdn.pocket-lint.com


See also

  • Extremely high frequency
  • IEEE 802.15
  • Intel Wireless Display (WiDi)
  • Miracast
  • UWB
  • Wireless Gigabit Alliance
  • Wireless Home Digital Interface

IOGEAR - GWHDKIT11 - Wireless HD TV Connection Kit
src: www.iogear.com


References


Defender Wireless HD 1080p 4-Channel 1TB DVR Security System with ...
src: images.homedepot-static.com


External links

  • Official website
  • Civil mm-wave Regulation in US
  • The Main Wireless HDMI Transmission Protocols and Their Typical Products

Source of the article : Wikipedia

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