MarketWatch: X-lumin Breaks the 400 Gbps Barrier in Wireless Optical Communications, Setting a New Industry Standard for Terrestrial Laser Networks
X-lumin Breaks the 400 Gbps Barrier in Wireless Optical Communications, Setting a New Industry Standard for Terrestrial Laser Networks
It includes smart distribution edge computing units (ECUs), high-speed power line communications (HPLC) that carry power services on power lines, and fiber and wireless backhaul networks that provide ...
In this definition of wireless communications, explore the history, evolution and future of wireless technology and the different types of wireless networks.
Neural networks have emerged as a transformative tool in wireless communications, offering innovative approaches for signal processing, channel estimation and transceiver design. By leveraging ...
Wireless communication networks form the backbone of modern digital connectivity, facilitating data exchange between a myriad of devices over the air. Spanning from localised ad hoc systems to global ...
Pioneering the future of wireless technology, the Wireless Communications Research Group drives innovation in 5G, 6G, and beyond through cutting-edge research, real-world solutions, and collaborative ...
Ranganath Taware is Chief Architect at Capgemini America Inc. 24+ yrs in telecom & AI. Leads GenAI, Telecom B/OSS innovation. The combination of wireless networks, agentic AI and artificial general ...
Researchers have developed an innovative method to improve next-generation wireless networks. Their approach ensures faster, more reliable connections by simplifying how large amounts of signal data ...
While optical fibre, which forms the backbone of modern communications networks, has made big advances in bandwidth and speed in recent years, these gains are limited without similar advances in the ...
Somewhat less common methods of achieving wireless communications involve other electromagnetic phenomena, such as light and magnetic or electric fields, or the use of sound. The term wireless has been used twice in communications history, with slightly different meanings.