Using LED Ceiling Lights For Digital Communication 143
PatPending writes "A Minnesota start-up company, LVX, is developing products under several patents and about a dozen pending applications, e.g., 'Building illumination apparatus with integrated communications, security and energy management,' that put clusters of LEDs in a standard-sized ceiling light fixture. The LEDs are in optical communication with special modems attached to office computers. The first generation of the LVX system will transmit data at speeds of about three megabits per second, roughly as fast as a residential DSL line. LVX Chief Executive Officer John Pederson said a second-generation system that will roll out in about a year will permit speeds on par with commercial Wi-Fi networks. It will also permit lights that can be programmed to change intensity and color. Pederson said the next generation of the system should get even more efficient as fixtures become 'smart' so the lights would dim when bright sunlight is coming through a window or when a conference room or hallway is empty. Hurdles: speed and installation costs. No word on the reliability and security of this system."
Another link (Score:5, Informative)
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IRDA was 4 Mbps (Score:3, Interesting)
I don't see how this is much better than the IRDA infrared that used to be built into laptops, printers, mice, etc. It got replaced by radio technology several generations ago.
Re:IRDA was 4 Mbps (Score:5, Funny)
IRDA doesn't flicker in the visible spectrum, and thus fails to cause hilarious non-fatal seizures in coworkers, which, I'm assuming, is the whole point of this new technology.
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IRDA doesn't flicker in the visible spectrum, and thus fails to cause hilarious non-fatal seizures in coworkers, which, I'm assuming, is the whole point of this new technology.
The real problem there is (particularly bicycle) lighting systems which intentionally pulse at ~10 Hz. A lighting system which transmits data by inserting fast negative going pulses into LEDs is unlikely to cause problems.
Background: I ride a bike and I have epilepsy, but my EEG results suggest my condition is not photosensitive.
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You killed the joke, you bastard.
I mean seriously, I think we all know that if this thing operates at 4Mbps, it can't be pulsing at anywhere near the brain-fritzing frequency. But that isn't the point. The point is, you epileptics are funny because of how you flop around. :P
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I think we all know that if this thing operates at 4Mbps, it can't be pulsing at anywhere near the brain-fritzing frequency.
Consider that activity LEDs on older hubs were connected directly to the data lines and could be used to transmit data. These LEDs also pulsed visibly. These LEDs could certainly pulse at visible rates because the data starts and stops at those rates. Even if "down" is "on" a second or so of sustained load would make the lights dim. Obviously the drivers would work to avoid that.
Sorry about wrecking your joke. I just think that LEDs are both tempting and dangerous to pulse at certain rates. Lots of trucks a
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It's all fun and games until someone loses an eye.
And then it's just fun.
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It's all fun and games until someone loses an eye.
And then it's time to play "find the eyeball".
FTFY
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IRDA doesn't flicker in the visible spectrum, and thus fails to cause hilarious non-fatal seizures in coworkers, which, I'm assuming, is the whole point of this new technology.
Joking yes. But being a self-proclaimed expert who hasn't even read the article my guess is that they are piggy-backing on the PWM commonly used to control LED brightness. The PWM frequencies for normal LED control are in the kilohertz range which is 100s of times faster than is visible to the human eye.
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God damn it, what is wrong with you people? Just let me enjoy my vision of thousands of office workers flopping around like fish on the floor, will you?
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Most rooms have more than one lightbulb. If they are all using PWM to control brightness it could be hard to pick out the data from just one. Also you need some kind of receiver in the bulb for two way communications as well.
Infra red makes more sense. A single high power IR LED can cover an entire room. As it happens I have recently been experimenting with a system that uses a single IR LED to broadcast the current time so that all the clocks in my room can receive an accurate setting. I was planning to us
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docomo demoed a one gigabit/s irda transfer a year or two ago.
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A wired connection requires a physical cable to be run to a specific location through the floor or ceiling and if the decision is made to rearrange the cubicles it adds thousands of dollars in rewiring. WiFi eliminates this requirement but necessitates an extra FCC license for every connection driving up the cost of the equipment. I suspect this would initially bypass the FCC as it does not use the RF spectrum. That's not to say at some point the feds won't decide they own the flickering light spectrum as w
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Extra FCC license for Wifi?
Wifi runs in unlicensed spectrum.
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Depends on how much power it puts out. Home units are low enough power they don't need any extra licensing but model for large enterprises using over 1 watt of power, do need a license.
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Large enterprises tend to use many low power access points. Especially in office buildings.
Walk into (or near) any office campus with your smartphone running an wifi analyzer and you will see 10s of APs (often "hidden" by not broadcasting any SSID).
Virtually nobody uses high power APs.
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Exactly.
Which is why high power WIFI is only used on factory floors, and usually only with specialized workstations.
Even large hotels simply use commercial grade low-power unlicensed APs.
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There's the issue of WiFi having quite complex propergation patterns. Whereas with visible light
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Don't forget to paint over the windows or your competitors only need to rent a room across the road to get all your datas...
The big problem with these things is they need to be lighting the room for the data to flow... when everyone goes home and someone turns out the lights it cuts off all the PCs in the room and you can't do remote admin stuff like software updates and security patches. The solution of leaving the lights on will get the environment crazies on your back.
The health and safety people will p
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The biggest problem with these patents, is everything they are claiming has been done before so all they are claiming is, they are doing with leds. So blindingly obvious that all previous technology applications facilitated by light emitting devices will transfer over to LEDs. So if they invented LED's fine if they did not, gees, just fuck off.
Hint, hint, a video display device communicates information to the human brain via lcds and leds, making use of the biological receiving devices of the human eye,
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There's the issue of WiFi having quite complex propergation patterns. Whereas with visible light to can easily tell where the coverage area and confine it to specific rooms without needing exotic building materials.
Not really... visible light can be as unpredictable... light reflects off walls and floors and can propagate quite far... you can be upstairs in bed and notice the downstairs light is still on since there is a faint light visible around the edges of the closed bedroom door...
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Sorry, your suspicions are wrong.
WiFi doesn't have or require F.C.C. licensing for the end users. It does have to comply with some F.C.C. rules, but any digital circuit switching at r.f. speeds does too even if not designed to radiate r.f.
There are F.C.C. rules that apply to all electronics using radio frequency energy. The goal is to limit r.f. radiation that may cause interference. Anything that has circuits switching at an r.f. rate, even power supplies, is covered by the rules. The associated testing
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The F.C.C. doesn't regulate visible light
... yet! ;) SCNR.
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I don't see how this is much better than the IRDA infrared that used to be built into laptops, printers, mice, etc. It got replaced by radio technology several generations ago.
There were, very briefly, vaguely wifi-esque IR "access points" designed for using IRDA connections in entire rooms(as opposed to the usual point-to-point between adjacent devices case). Some even supported multiple devices. I think the amount of IR you needed to pump out to get a reliable link without forcing the user to manually handle line-of-sight pretty much killed that one, though. I think these "access points" and contentional device-device IRDA were supposed to coexist in much the way wifi and bluet
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I wonder how a 3 watt Luxeon Irda led would work in a room. If a Wiimote can pick up two tiny leds, a mammoth led should be very visible in a room no matter how the receiver is pointed.
Perfect for transmitting in a single direction. :)
Bi-directional would need work.
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On the other hand, with the absolutely spooky optical MEMS stuff and CMOS/CCD imagers you can get for absolute peanuts today, you might be able to whip up a little solid-state device that tracked 2 or 4 "target" LEDs located around the room's receiver and then steered a low power IR laser right into its lens...
That would still only work with a clear LOS, and with the emitter window less than 90 degr
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this is better than current IRDA used by laptops because that one is slow and a pain in the rear to use. Also, light is less vulnerable to interference / interception than wifi
From what i see in the summary description from the article they are using a modified RONJA design but instead of the long-range with narrow beam they adapted it for a wide angle with a way smaller distance, fit for office ceiling usage.
A RONJA optical network has been capable of working at 10 mbps full duplex at 1,4 KILOMETERS (about
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P.S.
about the patent thing... this smells to me like patent system abuse... ronja was already using LEDs for network communications in 1998, using an AUI interface.
the only addition these guys made is mounting a ronja system into a light frame and using spectrum filters to filter out normal light
how can you patent such an obvious usage?
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The patent, aside from using "degrees Kelvin" twice, only covers combining the communications device with building illumination. This is a remarkably pointless thing to do and conveys no obvious benefit. (Oddly, the patent also would only be infringed by a system including at least one name tag that communicates with the system.)
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Possible patent suit approaching? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Possible patent suit approaching? (Score:4, Informative)
Google wants to help (although they dont take credit for the kohls devices) http://www.altierre.com/index.html [altierre.com]
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Good idea.
When I worked at JcPenney we would waste a day just ticketing items..... and oftentimes did not finish because of customers demanding service. Having signs that automatically update is the quick and labor-saving solution. Also helps to avoid fines when the government audits the store and finds "Sale $9.99" for a promotion that ended three days ago.
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When does the government audit retail stores? They may respond to consumer complaints, but I do not believe there is a government agency that actively audits stores to find sales price violations.
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State governments routinely audit stores to verify the price charged at the register matches the price advertised on the sign. When I was at JCP the corporation had been caught twice - once by Pennsylvania in the early 90s and again by Texas in 2002.
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Feel free to feel I'm wrong, but nothing there indicates that the problems found were the result of random audits. My opinion is that there were errors noticed by patrons that were then reported for a very targeted investigation, not the result of some government agency that routinely audits stores without complaints.
G
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Good idea.
When I worked at JcPenney we would waste a day just ticketing items..... and oftentimes did not finish because of customers demanding service.
Those fucking customers and their fucking demands. Hey, asshole, can't you see I'm busy ticketing items? What, just because you pay my salary you think I should drop this mundane task to assist you?
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Kohls has had technology like this in their stores for a little while now.
A little while? My local food store had that in the early 90s. Had some weird modulator thing that plugged into the florescent lights. It was some kind of weird boost/buck converter that varied the line power / light brightness by a volt or so from cycle to cycle. I had the EE background to understand it but no one at the store knew how it worked.
The interesting thing is if you only have a couple tens of thousands of price tags, it doesn't take a very high bandwidth signal to reprice everything in a cou
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Well, during the "boost" cycle of a boost/buck converter, yeah, I guess.
no computers under the desk then? (Score:2)
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Embedding it into a monitor (or having a small remote pickup) would solve that... Maybe shoot holes in the low speed, and need for the lights to be on for the network to be up?
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You are also susceptible to what I would like to call "flashlight in the middle"
any chance of someone being able to purposely disrupt it?
Re:no computers under the desk then? (Score:5, Interesting)
Because of little things like "eye safety" and "that guy in the truck with the generator and 5kw of stage lighting is pretty obvious at 300 meters" the classic "directional antenna and illegal power levels" that works so well on Wi-Fi probably won't work on this thing. On the other hand, TFA makes the company sound like they decided to go it alone, develop all their own patented tech and protocols and stuff. If the history of RF is anything to go on(Why hello WEP and the assorted nameless 900mhz and 2.4ghz cordless phone systems, we were just talking about you...) people who do that tend to make protocol and/or cryptographic mistakes. Assuming this stuff ever gets out of complete obscurity, I assume that snarky grey-hats will be flooding the system with garbage frames at defcon and you'll be able to buy little LED flashlights from ebay that exploit buffer overflows and execute arbitrary code on the microcontrollers in the ceiling fixtures...
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This is not a problem: leave the modem on the desk.
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I would say that it depends. It may work just fine with reflected light so it may not be an issue.
It is an interesting idea for things like automation and data acquisition as well as location services.
imagine this in a large corporate campus. If you need to find someone or something each room would have an identifier telling you where you are.
A lamp could tell you that it is on or off, an AC unit could be reset. It will really depend on how cheap it all is.
Security of the system? (Score:3)
If it operates in the infrared spectrum, the bonus is that most glass blocks it, so it would be harder to get a signal. The downside is, a sufficiently sensitive thermal camera with LoS to the bulb or a reflector in LoS with the bulb would give it to you.
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If it operates in the infrared spectrum, the bonus is that most glass blocks it, so it would be harder to get a signal. The downside is, a sufficiently sensitive thermal camera with LoS to the bulb or a reflector in LoS with the bulb would give it to you.
Infrared devices of the kind that you're describing don't operate in the thermal part of the spectrum. They use near-infrared light, which is easily visible through most kinds of glass.
If you want Security, use Crypto (Score:2)
Even if windows gave you some filtering, you'd still have to deal with insiders, virus-infected users, etc. If you want security, you still need to use crypto.
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Actually glass is transparent to Infrared . . .
Modern window glass is typically formulated/coated to absorb or reflect UV and infrared as much as possible while transmitting as much visible light as desired. Not sure if it would be enough to block a signal at a particular infrared wavelength or not.
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When the power company comes by your house to do a thermal image, the windows always show heat loss/gain (depending on outside temperature). Glass does not block infrared. It does block UV, which is why reptile keepers can't put their UV lights on a glass aquarium top (but can for their infrared heaters).
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For the second trick put an infrared heater next to
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Glass doesn't block infrared, it blocks UV.
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Although I know that you're being sarcastic and a troll... I must point out that unless your laser is operating in a complete vaccum, there is some diffraction of the beam thanks to particles of dust and what-not in the air.
This isn't their only product. (Score:5, Funny)
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But can you war-dial with it?
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Would you like to play a game?
Rife with QRM, HAMs will NOT be happy! (Score:1)
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I think that's what the patents are for. They don't use BPL. The light fixtures are located in dropped ceilings. Above the ceiling each light fixture has another light sensor. The data comes from yet another lightbulb even higher above the dropped ceiling. Those really high up lightbulbs use WiFi.
http://appft.uspto.gov/netacgi/nph-Parser?Sect1=PTO2&Sect2=HITOFF&u=%2Fnetahtml%2FPTO%2Fsearch-adv.html&r=1&p=1&f=G&l=50&d=PG01&S1=(%22building+illumination+apparatus%22.TTL.)&OS=ttl/%22building+illumination+apparatus%22&RS=TTL/%22building+illumination+apparatus%22 [uspto.gov] Go there and search for "BPL" and "BOPL"
[0088]The lights shown in FIG. 5, in accordance with an embodiment of the invention, will have AC wiring with data carriers such as S-BPL, and static locations encoded into the system. Thus a person 190 entering a hallway 192 with a communications badge 170 could use only those lights needed for his travel. As the person progresses toward a destination, the lights behind may be no longer needed and so may be programmed to turn off.
Power, which may be either AC or DC current is coupled through a power line bridge 150 with data from a network cable input, for example. The source of the data is not critical to the operation of the present invention, but may include various computer outputs such as might, for exemplary purposes, include control processor output or network connections such as commonly found on Local Area Networks (LAN), Wide Area Networks (WAN) or through the Internet. In accord with one embodiment, the wiring between power line bridge 150 and LED light source 161 is shielded by passing through a conduit or the like, defining a Shielded Broadband-over-Power-Line (S-BPL) connection that is both resistant to interfering communications and also produces almost no radiant energy.
And:
[0085]As seen in FIG. 4, the electrical wiring in the hallways and/or rooms may include BOPL.
At least they are considering using shielded power cabling, aka "S-BPL", but I would think using WiFi would be a wiser choice, one lousy installation of S-BPL c
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No.
Its lightbulbs all the way up.
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From what I've read about this, while the LED lights are optical, the transmission line, aka the power line will still be used to carry data transmissions to and from the LED lights, I don't see how this or any other BPL tech being allowed by the FCC
How is that not a problem for (say) cat 5 cable? Maybe because it consists of twisted pairs? So twist the power cable, or shield it, or plug your cat 5 directly into the light fitting as the data input.
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I was thinking more about modulating the DC feed to the LEDs but as you point out the data and power circuits are going to have to come together at some point and I suppose the solutions to that problem are isolation and grounding. Once standards are developed for both it should go okay. Its possible to do it safely, even if the switches have to be on a fibre backbone, or some such.
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I was thinking more about modulating the DC feed to the LEDs but as you point out the data and power circuits are going to have to come together at some point and I suppose the solutions to that problem are isolation and grounding. Once standards are developed for both it should go okay. Its possible to do it safely, even if the switches have to be on a fibre backbone, or some such.
I suppose you could have a CAT5 switch in every section of a building which feeds data to every light socket via means of CAT5, but uses a fiber backbone for the long haul back to a central point, that would prevent lightning from passing any further past that room or section of a building. But I would imagine maintenance after a lightning strike or power surge would then require the complete disassembly of the entire roof to remove all of the dead and melted CAT5 and power cabling, not too different to wh
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CQ, CQ, CQ DX, CQ DX, this is Executive One Foxtrot calling CQ DX.
Just static, must be the lights. ;)
Hi Hi :)
Its a massive problem in some areas:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dK3MuTPlHS0 [youtube.com]
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R6sYD3C0jo8 [youtube.com]
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fGA4MCNeN7c [youtube.com]
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useless (Score:4, Informative)
The first generation of the LVX system will transmit data at speeds of about three megabits per second, roughly as fast as a residential DSL line.
Is that physical layer rate? If so, what's the rate after protocol overhead?
Let's assume that is the physical layer rate. Which would make it three and a half times slower than 802.11b, and 18 times slower than 802.11g, which is virtually everywhere. And, drumroll please, at least one hundred times slower than 802.11n, which is 300-600Mbit/sec (physical layer speed.)
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Think of the possibilities (Score:1)
Hide a sensor anywhere nearby, and you can read all the internal traffic.
Drop a tiny node in a plushy on someones desk, spewing out all sorts of Window virus, and see how long it takes for the IP staff to find it.
Shine a modulated laser beam through a window, and disrupt all the network traffic in an office.
Might be useful with SAD light therapy LEDs (Score:2)
Big Brother (Score:2)
If your lights are being used as a cableless fiber optic system, what is to keep big brother from sitting outside and picking up the communications from the street?
This technology is already in use in supermarkets (Score:2)
It's used to send pricing information to LCD price displays attached to shelves via the supermarket lighting (it's done at night when there's no-one around to be affected by it, and in any case since it's at a much higher frequency than the usual 50Hz flicker it wouldn't be noticed anyway). Think of the usual paper price tags in plastic holders attached to shelves, but now they have LCD displays and are updated automatically by modulating the in-store lighting.
HHI (Score:2)
HHI is already doing that, saw it in FOE2010.
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From TFA:
Mohsen Kavehrad, a Penn State electrical engineering professor who has been working with optical network technology for about 10 years, said the approach could be a vital complement to the existing wireless system. He said the radio spectrum usually used for short-range transmissions, such as Wi-Fi, is getting increasingly crowded, which can lead to slower connections. "Light can be the way out of this mess," said Kavehrad, who is not involved in the LVX project.
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More intelligent use of the spectrum is the solution, not light.
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*sigh* More intelligent use of the radio frequency spectrum.
Damn pedantics =)
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Damn pedantics =)
I believe you mean "damn pedants". Pedantic is an adjective.
Just sayin...
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Don't you mean... (Score:2)
-1, Pedantic. ?
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I prefer mine much higher on the spectrum. Closer to 10^20Hz. It takes care of pesky problems in your transmission stream too.
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slashdot = stagnated.
This from the /. Troll with dozens of /. accounts. From
http://slashdot.org/~MichaelKristopeit300 [slashdot.org]
now through
http://slashdot.org/~MichaelKristopeit328 [slashdot.org]
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Having this in offices/factories would eliminate 'network' from the list of worries when you restack cubes, or re-arrange focus factories.
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Saving you from running cable that last 6 feet?
It saves the company from running cable that last average of 100 feet or so from the wiring closet to each desk, multiplied by the number of desks on the floor (in this building there are about 100 desks per floor) multiplied by the number of times cube moves take place (you don't want to know how often this is, but triennial is not far from the truth) multiplied by the cost for an electrician to run a single line of cable. I think the average cost to pull a single run ranges from about $200-$400 on up, de
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Thanks. My back-of-the-envelope is a lot less optimistic than yours, as I was trotting out worst cases on all counts.
What I really wanted to do was answer the GP as to "why" a company might want to avoid the last-mile expenses of a cubicle farm. I don't think for a moment that it's a good idea, mind you, because I agree that hard-wired installations are always technically superior to wireless in terms of performance.
For grins, follow the LVX link to their "technology introduction [lvx-system.com]" page, where you'll find
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Parent was making a joke, probably, but back when 10Mbit network hubs were the latest thing the LEDs would flicker directly with activity and it actually was possible to spy on the network given determination and the proper equipment.
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You know, I heard rumors about that, but I don't see how it could have possibly worked. The light flickered as traffic went by. Knowing that a packet was sent is useless if you don't know the payload of it.
This is a different case entirely though. Well, mostly. They've reinvented fiber optic networks, without the fiber. Of course, that increases the noise for the receiving end, the chances for interception, and the ability for someone to break a connection with a Post-It n
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For whatever reason, there was one area where absolutely enormous numbers of IR wireless keyboards showed up: Hotel TV entertainment systems(I think "lodgenet" may have been one, my memory is a little fuzzy). For various usurious fees, you could use the keyboar