. Updated Daily. Editions SDA India   SDA Indonesia
BUSINESS ENTERPRISE SOLUTIONS ARCHITECTURE INFORMATION SECURITY WIRELESS & MOBILITY DATA & STORAGE DEVELOPMENT HARDWARE













News

Wednesday, 30 July 2008

Home Network Technologies Will Coexist, Not Compete

 

 

Consumer Electronics (CE) products will no longer exist in a vacuum but increasingly linked to each other via a number of short-range radio technologies. Such a trend will see CE vendors faced with a series of overlapping use-cases, network areas, standards, and technologies, need to understand the applications best suited to each, and how they relate to each other.

According to ABI Research, fortunately, short-range networking technologies are settling into more or less clearly defined roles, and will by and large coexist and complement each other rather than competing.

“Technologies such as Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, UWB, 60 GHz, and ZigBee will not compete within the home…but will be used in coordination, overlapping and coexisting for full wireless network coverage,” said Douglas McEuen, senior analyst, ABI Research.

“Each of these technologies has a sweet spot or specialty.

“Bluetooth will be the driving technology in the PAN (personal area network) and may see some success in remote controls, especially for gaming. Wi-Fi will be the key technology for wireless LAN (local area network). UWB and 60 GHz respectively will be specialized for home office peripherals, and for wireless HDMI (uncompressed video sent from a set-top box to a high-definition TV). ZigBee stands apart, as a home automation technology.”

There are a few competitive counter-trends worth noting says ABI.

Recently, Intel and OZMO Devices announced a program that uses standard Wi-Fi protocols to handle PAN tasks such as syncing notebooks with various PC peripherals and wireless consumer electronics.

The RF4CE (Radio Frequency for Consumer Electronics) industry consortium has been formed recently to develop a new protocol for radio frequency remote controls that would compete with Bluetooth to replace IR remote controls for audiovisual equipment.

However, these are the exceptions that prove the rule, according to the market research firm.

 
 
print save email comment

print

save

email

comment

 
 

Search SDA Asia

Free eNewsletter

SDA Asia Magazine Free Download
 
 
 
Copyright @ 2009 SDA Asia Magazine - All Right Reserved Privacy Policy | Terms of Use