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Haier Plans To Embed Area Wireless Chargers In Home Appliances

Lucas123 writes Haier has signed a development agreement with Energous, a maker of the WattUp wireless charging router. Haier plans incorporate the technology in appliances allowing enabled mobile devices and wearables to take a charge at up 15 feet away. The white goods maker is expected to come out with the enabled appliances in the next 14 months or so. The WattUp router uses radio frequency (RF) transmissions to send up to 4 watts of power in a 15-ft. radius. Within 5 feet of a WattUp wireless router, a mobile device can be charged at the same rate as if it were plugged into a wall socket, but as the distance increase the charging capability dissipates. For example, at a range of 5-to-10 feet, charging capability drops to 2 watts per device and at 10-to-15 feet, the router puts out 1 watt per device (4 watts total). Pleasanton, Calif.-based Energous raised nearly $25 million when it went public earlier this year. Its chief marketing officer said the company has joint development agreements in the works with battery makers, smartphone sleeve and wearable device manufacturers. Haier hasn't disclosed what products it plans to enable with wireless charging.

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  1. Re:Sounds wasteful and stupid ... by AchilleTalon · · Score: 3, Informative

    I don't believe you can run your coffee maker on 4 W, neither your toaster, these appliances are power hungry. Unless you wish to be cooked by your wireless thingy there is no hope to take rid of these power cables in a foreseeable future.

    Average power consumption table

    This thing is good only for smartphones, tablets or slowly recharge a laptop battery. Even LED ligths are starting at 5 W to 60 W. There is a lot of unrealistic expectations here.

    --
    Achille Talon
    Hop!