FireWire Gets Ready to Go Wireless
mindless4210 writes "The 1394 Trade Association has approved a specification for the development of wireless FireWire applications, which will let 1394-enabled devices, both wired and unwired, to connect with each other. The new spec will enable communication between a variety of devices, such as set-top boxes, HDTVs, tuners, and DVD players, all of which will be able to interoperate in home networks. Officials speculated that in the future there could be plug-in cards for set-top boxes enabling wireless connection to DVD players and hard-disk drives. The trade association also said it will work with the WiMedia Alliance to jointly develop collaborative products."
Team targets 802.15.3 for wireless video networks
Fun with Anagarams! LADS HOST, SHALT DOS. HAS DOLTS. AD SLOTHS, HATS SOLD. ASS HO, LTD.
Simple. The two busses have little in common.
Firewire:
- peer-to-peer design (all devices are created equal)
- low CPU overhead due to an intelligent controller with DMA
- requires smarter hardware due to peer-to-peer design
- heavily standardized protocols for storage, audio, video.
USB:- host-device design - devices can only talk to host, not each other
- higher CPU overhead since the host controller is relatively dumb
- really inexpensive hardware (both host and device), ideal for low-cost devices
- standardized protocols for pretty much everything, but particularly human interface devices
Firewire is well-suited to audio/video applications and storage, since those applications require heavy throughput, which would severely tax the CPU when using USB.USB is well-suited to low-speed devices like keyboards, mice, and inexpensive still cameras, scanners, and other consumer devices, since cost is the primary factor in their design.
Just my $0.02.
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