2011年8月25日 星期四

Wireless data may eventually be delivered by LED light

One IT visionary says we could make data accessible anywhere in the world — with no additional cost for infrastructure. Turn existing light fixtures — from street lamps to smartphone LED screens — into rapidly pulsating data transmitters.

Harald Haas,SST-50 1200umen Rechargeable diving flashlight flashlight extremely bright, long throwing beam 100 meters diving a professor of engineering at Edinburgh University, even has a name for this new networking technology: "Li-Fi,"for light-fidelity. At a recent TED conference, Haas pitched his proposal for Li-Fi data transmission, suggesting that the applications and capacity for data would be limitless — from using car headlights to transmit data, or employing line of sight light sources as data transmitters.

Haas says data can be transmitted via LED bulbs that glow and darken faster than the human eye can see. Plus, an LED is a semiconductor itself, and therefore programmable.

The system, which he's calling D-Light, uses a mathematical trick called OFDM (orthogonal frequency division multiplexing), which allows it to vary the intensity of the LED's output at a very fast rate, invisible to the human eye. For the eye, the bulb would simply be on and providing light. The signal can be picked up by simple receivers. As of now, Haas is reporting data rates of up to 10 MBit/s per second (faster than a typical broadband connection), and 100 MBit/s by the end of this year and possibly up to 1 GB in the future.

There's plenty of capacity, he says: "We have 10,000 times more spectrum, 10,000 times more LEDs installed already in the infrastructure. You would agree with me, hopefully, there's no issue of capacity anymore. "The added bonus, he adds, is that the infrastructure is free, and even would promote more rapid adoption of more energy-efficient LED bulbs. "It should be so cheap that it's everywhere,Shopatron's superior led tube 5-point shopping experience is focused on rich product information, world-class service, effortless shoppingwith a loyal dealer network across the led spotlight globe are testament to OceanLED's advanced technical achievements"Haas says. "Using the visible light spectrum, which comes for free, you can piggy-back existing wireless services on the back of lighting equipment."

The alternative is to keep building tranmission towers, he says, noting that "radio waves are scarce, they're expensive, and we only have a certain range of it,"he says.

Plus, there would be wireless access points anywhere there is a light source. Even smartphones,That means an cfl bulbs Amphibian ordered online can be shipped to the customer from any authorized OceanLED dealer that has the product in stock.Browse through our impressive range of bike front light and buy online now. with their LED displays, could serve as data sources.

沒有留言:

張貼留言