710 results found. results are sorted by relevance
  226-250
https://grouper.ieee.org/groups/802/15/pub/04/15-04-0511-03-003a-consolidation-questions-responses-no-vote-explanations.doc
Can you outline the adaptation of the DS-UWB solution wrt. to its higher layer interfaces such as OHCI for USB, 1394 4.)
https://grouper.ieee.org/groups/802/15/pub/04/15-04-0511-02-003a-consolidation-questions-responses-no-vote-explanations.doc
Can you outline the adaptation of the DS-UWB solution wrt. to its higher layer interfaces such as OHCI for USB, 1394 4.)
https://grouper.ieee.org/groups/802/15/pub/04/15-04-0511-04-003a-consolidation-questions-responses-no-vote-explanations.doc
Can you outline the adaptation of the DS-UWB solution wrt. to its higher layer interfaces such as OHCI for USB, 1394 4.)
https://grouper.ieee.org/groups/802/15/pub/2004/15-04-0511-04-003a-consolidation-questions-responses-no-vote-explanations.doc
Can you outline the adaptation of the DS-UWB solution wrt. to its higher layer interfaces such as OHCI for USB, 1394 4.)
https://grouper.ieee.org/groups/802/3/GEPOFSG/public/May_2014/Pardo_GEPOF_1_0514.pdf
.* FOT)* Harness*PCB* POFs* ECU*backside* 19* Impact*on*Space* Using*MulXpin*Connector*for*electrical* 1, 5* D IN *= *7 5m m * 1* D IN *= *5 0m m * Ventilation* Cooling* U SB * 180mm* •Example*back*plane*of*multimedia*ECU*with*one*horizontal*an*one*vertical*PCB* •Extending*the*size*to*1,5DIN*has*little*effect*as*some*connectors*(antennas,* Ethernet,*USB)*need*to*be*directly*connected*to*PCB* •Space*is*sparse.
https://grouper.ieee.org/groups/1722/contributions/2011/avtp-dolsen-new-par-v4.pdf
. • Technologies such as IEEE 1394, Bluetooth and USB exist today but each has their own encapsulation, protocols, timing control, etc. such that building interworking functions is difficult.
https://grouper.ieee.org/groups/802/15/pub/2002/Mar02/02104r0P802-15_SG3a-Technical-Requirements-STARTING-DOC.doc
There are additional requirements in Quality of Service. 2.0 Data Throughput and Range Requirement Source 100 / 200 / 400 and 480 Mb/s up to 4.5 m range 02/031r0 20 Mb/s to 10 m range 00/075r0 60 Mb/s, 90, >100 Mb/s (kiosk) 02/043r0 2-25 Mb/s; 31-63 Mb/s 10 m and 30 m 02/047r0 6-32 Mb/s; 15-50 MB/s; 20-70 Mb/s; 30-100 Mb/s 10 m or 30-50 m range 02/119r0 2 Mb/s to 300 Mb/s: scalable >10 m range to 3 m range 02/137r1 1.5 Mb/s, 12 Mb/s, 480 Mb/s to < 5 m range; 10 -1000 Mb/s desired 02/139r0 50 Mb/s – 500 Mb/s 1 m on body to 5 m ranges: scalable – very low bit rate to high bit rate 02/143r0 3.0 Data Rate and Capacity and Addressing Requirement Source 3 non-overlap channels, min effective throughput 50 Mb/s each 02/031r0 multiple simultaneous channels 02/119r0 4 to 8 non-overlap channels, to 300 Mb/s shared 02/137r1 addressing of <127 devices per host 02/139r0 Large capacity, many devices (private addresses) 02/143r0 4.0 Coexistence, Interference Resistance, Multipath Requirement Source Coexistence with other 802, BlueTooth, Cellular, PCS, GPS, 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz devices 02/043r0, 02/137r1, 02/139r0, 02/143r0 Operates within 1 m of 802, BlueTooth, Cellular, PCS and GPS 02/119r0 Must work with incumbent networks 02/137r1 Must support combinations of network technologies 02/137r1 Shall be capable of (802.15.3) 22 Mb/s QPSK mode 02/102r0 Robust in multipath (indoor) 02/143r0 5.0 Channel Model Requirement Source Wide band channel model (to be defined) 02/137r1 JTC residential A 02/031r0 7.0 Power Consumption Requirement Source 350-450 mW on CamCorder; 150-200 mW Still Digital camera; <100 mW in PDA; 90mW in (toy) wireless robot control 02/043r0 Possible on battery operated devices 02/047r0, 02/143r0 Low power and advanced power management; low power density 02/102r0 40-80 mW battery power; and 150-500 mW mains 02/119r0 Power management 02/139r0 8.0 Quality of Service Requirement Source “Best remedy” for QoS 02/043r0 10-9 BER: video; isochronous capable 02/047r0 10-12 BER: USB-LL 02/139r0 Secure communications; privacy in PAN 02/143r0 High quality audio / video at high bit rate 02/147r0 9.0 Form Factor Requirement Source Not a factor in some applications . easy to integrate into consumer devices, especially portable 02/119r0 memory stick, SD card, Media Card compatible size 02/102r0 5cm x 2.15cm x 0.28 cm without antenna but with MAC: cameras 02/043r0 10.0 Cost Requirement Source Cost and BOM similar to BlueTooth 02/119r0, 02/043r0, 02/031r0
https://grouper.ieee.org/rac/private/email/msg03223.html
These slave devices are kind of "dummy" I/O expansion cards as they just pass data to/from master device from/to it's I/O ports (RS232, RS485,  ethernet, digital I/O, USB, temperature).
https://grouper.ieee.org/groups/802/15/pub/2002/Mar02/02104r0P802-15_SG3a-Technical-Requirements.doc
There are additional requirements in Quality of Service. 2.0 Data Throughput and Range Requirement Source 100 / 200 / 400 and 480 Mb/s up to 4.5 m range 02/031r0 20 Mb/s to 10 m range 00/075r0 60 Mb/s, 90, >100 Mb/s (kiosk) 02/043r0 2-25 Mb/s; 31-63 Mb/s 10 m and 30 m 02/047r0 6-32 Mb/s; 15-50 MB/s; 20-70 Mb/s; 30-100 Mb/s 10 m or 30-50 m range 02/119r0 2 Mb/s to 300 Mb/s: scalable >10 m range to 3 m range 02/137r1 1.5 Mb/s, 12 Mb/s, 480 Mb/s to < 5 m range; 10 -1000 Mb/s desired 02/139r0 50 Mb/s – 500 Mb/s 1 m on body to 5 m ranges: scalable – very low bit rate to high bit rate 02/143r0 3.0 Data Rate and Capacity and Addressing Requirement Source 3 non-overlap channels, min effective throughput 50 Mb/s each 02/031r0 multiple simultaneous channels 02/119r0 4 to 8 non-overlap channels, to 300 Mb/s shared 02/137r1 addressing of <127 devices per host 02/139r0 Large capacity, many devices (private addresses) 02/143r0 4.0 Coexistence, Interference Resistance, Multipath Requirement Source Coexistence with other 802, BlueTooth, Cellular, PCS, GPS, 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz devices 02/043r0, 02/137r1, 02/139r0, 02/143r0 Operates within 1 m of 802, BlueTooth, Cellular, PCS and GPS 02/119r0 Must work with incumbent networks 02/137r1 Must support combinations of network technologies 02/137r1 Shall be capable of (802.15.3) 22 Mb/s QPSK mode 02/102r0 Robust in multipath (indoor) 02/143r0 5.0 Channel Model Requirement Source Wide band channel model (to be defined) 02/137r1 JTC residential A 02/031r0 7.0 Power Consumption Requirement Source 350-450 mW on CamCorder; 150-200 mW Still Digital camera; <100 mW in PDA; 90mW in (toy) wireless robot control 02/043r0 Possible on battery operated devices 02/047r0, 02/143r0 Low power and advanced power management; low power density 02/102r0 40-80 mW battery power; and 150-500 mW mains 02/119r0 Power management 02/139r0 8.0 Quality of Service Requirement Source “Best remedy” for QoS 02/043r0 10-9 BER: video; isochronous capable 02/047r0 10-12 BER: USB-LL 02/139r0 Secure communications; privacy in PAN 02/143r0 High quality audio / video at high bit rate 02/147r0 9.0 Form Factor Requirement Source Not a factor in some applications . easy to integrate into consumer devices, especially portable 02/119r0 memory stick, SD card, Media Card compatible size 02/102r0 5cm x 2.15cm x 0.28 cm without antenna but with MAC: cameras 02/043r0 10.0 Cost Requirement Source Cost and BOM similar to BlueTooth 02/119r0, 02/043r0, 02/031r0
https://grouper.ieee.org/rac/private/email/msg03229.html
These slave devices are kind of "dummy" I/O expansion cards as they just pass data to/from master device from/to it's I/O ports (RS232, RS485,  ethernet, digital I/O, USB, temperature).
https://grouper.ieee.org/groups/1722/contributions/2007/AVB-Transport-par-revision-0.06-2007-02-12.pdf
. • Technologies exist today such as IEEE 1394, Bluetooth and USB, but each have their own unique encapsulation, protocols, timing control, etc. such that building interworking functions is difficult.
https://grouper.ieee.org/groups/1722/contributions/2007/avbtp-bartky-par-rev-0-16-2007-04-10.pdf
. • Technologies such as IEEE 1394, Bluetooth and USB exist today but each has their own encapsulation, protocols, timing control, etc. such that building interworking functions is difficult.
https://grouper.ieee.org/groups/1722/contributions/2007/AVB-Transport-par-r0%2010-2007-02-17.pdf
. • Technologies exist today such as IEEE 1394, Bluetooth and USB, but each have their own unique encapsulation, protocols, timing control, etc. such that building interworking functions is difficult.
https://grouper.ieee.org/groups/802/15/pub/2003/Mar03/Misc/WCNC2003_UWB_Abstracts.doc
Foerster , Intel Intel has been researching and developing ultra-wideband (UWB) technology for high-rate, short-range cable replacement applications like USB 2.0 for the last 2-3 years.
https://grouper.ieee.org/rac/private/email/msg03228.html
These slave devices are kind of "dummy" I/O expansion cards as they just pass data to/from master device from/to it's I/O ports (RS232, RS485,  ethernet, digital I/O, USB, temperature).
https://grouper.ieee.org/groups/1722/contributions/2007/avbtp-bartky-par-rev-0-17-2007-04-16.pdf
. • Technologies such as IEEE 1394, Bluetooth and USB exist today but each has their own encapsulation, protocols, timing control, etc. such that building interworking functions is difficult.
https://grouper.ieee.org/groups/1722/contributions/2011/1722-new-par-v1-2011-2-8.pdf
. • Technologies such as IEEE 1394, Bluetooth and USB exist today but each has their own encapsulation, protocols, timing control, etc. such that building interworking functions is difficult.
https://grouper.ieee.org/groups/802/secmail/msg11291.html
Please stop by and pick one up (and you get to keep the USB drive!).
https://grouper.ieee.org/groups/msc/upamd/email/msg00074.html
To supply power other devices beyond the USB 10W power range > ii.
https://grouper.ieee.org/groups/802/3/efm/public/email/msg01933.html
Prev by Date: [EFM] New Orleans Meeting Reminder Next by Date: [EFM] (4 in ONE)...Camera-Recorder-MP3-USB(World's Best) Prev by thread: Re: [EFM] Minutes of P2MP Optics conference 22nd Aug 20002 Next by thread: RE: [EFM] Video distribution Index(es): Date Thread
https://grouper.ieee.org/groups/802/secmail/msg11292.html
Please stop by and pick one up (and you > get to keep the USB drive!).
https://grouper.ieee.org/groups/802/mbwa/email/index36.html
From : "Gang Wu" Date: Thu, 20 Nov 2003 02:17:58 -0500 (EST) stds-802-mobility: Fw: Formation of a Study Group in 802.18 on "Unlicensed Use of Unused TV Broadcast Spectrum" From : "Gang Wu" Date: Wed, 19 Nov 2003 18:33:23 -0500 (EST) stds-802-mobility: USB Storage Device Left at 802.20 Meeting From : Jerry1upton@aol.com Date: Tue, 18 Nov 2003 13:26:37 -0500 (EST) stds-802-mobility: 2004 WiFi Voice Conference From : "mwinkhler" Date: Tue, 18 Nov 2003 04:43:54 -0500 (EST) stds-802-mobility: Our web site has been updated From : "Gang Wu" Date: Mon, 17 Nov 2003 14:43:59 -0500 (EST) 802.18 doc From : "Stevenson, Carl R (Carl)" Date: Thu, 13 Nov 2003 20:51:27 -0500 (EST) another .18 doc From : "Stevenson, Carl R (Carl)" Date: Thu, 13 Nov 2003 18:13:15 -0500 (EST) Return to top of Page Mail converted by MHonArc
https://grouper.ieee.org/groups/msc/upamd/meetings/Agendas/UPAMD_Agenda_22June2010.pdf
Consider working with USB on version to AC couple to power lead. iii.
https://grouper.ieee.org/groups/802/secmail/msg14888.html
In a recent instance, a patent nominally associated with implementations of 802.9 (a long dead standard) was claimed by the NPE owner as being essential in implementations of USB.
https://grouper.ieee.org/groups/802/secmail/msg11289.html
Please stop by and pick one up (and you get to keep > the USB drive!).