» This Story:Read +| Comments

It's a WiFi World

Wireless technology gets an upgrade.

Discussion Policy
Comments that include profanity or personal attacks or other inappropriate comments or material will be removed from the site. Additionally, entries that are unsigned or contain "signatures" by someone other than the actual author will be removed. Finally, we will take steps to block users who violate any of our posting standards, terms of use or privacy policies or any other policies governing this site. Please review the full rules governing commentaries and discussions. You are fully responsible for the content that you post.
By Matt Schneiderman
Portfolio.com: Business Travel
Monday, September 24, 2007; 7:00 AM

Imagine a future in which the whole earth is a giant WiFi hotspot. You'll check email at 39,000 feet as you're jetting from JFK to LAX. Your car radio will play songs by accessing your home PC. You'll videoconference from any street corner with colleagues in Mumbai and ­Munich. The upside? You'll always be connected. The downside? You'll always be connected.

[an error occurred while processing this directive]

That future isn't far away-wireless coverage to support such applications is in the works. Portland, Oregon, has a citywide wireless network; Philadelphia is set to finish one this fall; and almost 200 cities are cutting their cords too. (For a list, see ­portfolio.com/mag/wireless.) The number of U.S. home-wireless-network users has rocketed from 37 million in 2003 to 223.5 million this year, according to the market-analysis firm ABI Research.

WiFi technology itself is getting an upgrade. Gear built to the n standard, which began trickling into stores this summer, is stronger and up to five times as fast as its g predecessor, which is now used in most homes. The new standard means bigger hot­spots, quicker downloads, and less-jumpy video for those who are catching up on their favorite TV shows online.

It also means more products like the ones below, which deploy WiFi technology in new ways. Welcome to the WiFi world.

WiFi

WiFi isn't short for anything. Interbrand, the consultancy that coined Prozac, invented the term in 1999 after an industry group now called the Wi-Fi Alliance hired it to create a moniker (other finalists: Torchlight, Elevate).

The father of WiFi, Dutch engineer Vic Hayes, didn't invent the technology but steered the sector away from a VHS-versus-Beta-style debacle. In the early 1990s, Hayes corralled the many companies working on wireless-networking technology into an agreement on WiFi standards.

Bluetooth and WiFi are distinct technologies. Bluetooth is used for short-range links between devices. WiFi is up to 12 times as fast, has an average range of 200 feet, and connects broader networks.

H.P. MediaSmart L.C.D. HDTV, $2,200 (42-inch)

This HDTV can pull movies (homemade or downloaded) wirelessly from your PC. It can also access content from the movie-download site CinemaNow.

Com One Phoenix WiFi Radio, $249

Thousands of online radio stations, podcasts, and RSS feeds are off-limits to your old-fashioned sleep shatterer but not to this rechargeable battery-operated clock radio.


CONTINUED     1        >


» This Story:Read +| Comments
© 2007 Portfolio