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10Gbps Wireless Transfers

Erasei writes "NTT Science and Core Technology Laboratory Group has developed a wireless communications that is capable of transmitting data at speeds of up to 10Gbps. In order to achieve such high data transmission speeds, the system uses the as-yet-unused 120GHz frequency band. The actual bandwidth the system uses is 17GHz, and the method of modulation employed is amplitude shift keying."

6 of 173 comments (clear)

  1. Getting faster by molywi · · Score: 5, Funny

    Yesterday there was an article about 19megabits.. now its 10gbps.. Wow, we are getting faster everyday!

    1. Re:Getting faster by ActiveSX · · Score: 5, Funny

      10 gbps/day increase. Kiss our asses, Moore.

  2. THIS JUST IN! by CoffeeJedi · · Score: 5, Funny

    A large number of birds seem to be falling out of the sky fully cooked near the NTT Science and Core Technology Laboratory Group headquarters near the experimental wireless data towers. More on this strange story as it develops.

    --
    May you be touched by His Noodly Appendage. RAmen.
    1. Re:THIS JUST IN! by Hadlock · · Score: 5, Funny

      actually, there's a space junk tracking facility somewhere in the pan handle of texas, at least, that's the radar sending station..... you'll see a flock of geese go flying past the mile long radar array and all of a sudden the whole flying V will start spiraling downwards till they nearly hit the ground, then suddenly fly upwards again, and spiral back down again until one of them finally spirals out of the radar's effective field, at which point the rest of the geese (or whatever) see one goose flying normally and follow after him. very strange.

      --
      moox. for a new generation.
  3. Here, take this by Maradine · · Score: 5, Funny

    So, basically, what we're saying is, by the time we get to 1Tb/s, we're all going to have to be close enough that I might as well just hand you a floppy?

    And is that a run-on? Sheesh. Critics.

    --

    trustedworlds.net - gaming, security, and the gunk that lives in between

  4. Re:What range? by DjMd · · Score: 5, Funny

    Actually I'm hoping to transmit from the desk to the object sitting at the desk...

    My current device uses the 560nm-800nm electromagentic spectrum. And while it can send a large volume of data quickly, my receiving unit processes the data, but most it is lost in storage. If only the process wasn't so lossy!

    Can anyone recommend any upgrades? I am still using the orginal neural network that came with this model...

    (too subtle?)

    --
    DJMD - The fourth man - Planetary