Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards> ?p ?o }
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards abstract "A wide variety of different wireless data technologies exist, some in direct competition with one another, others designed for specific applications. Wireless technologies can be evaluated by a variety of different metrics of which some are described in this entry.Standards can be grouped as follows in increasing range order:Personal Area Network (PAN) systems are intended for short range communication between devices typically controlled by a single person. Some examples include wireless headsets for mobile phones or wireless heart rate sensors communicating with a wrist watch. Some of these technologies include standards such as ANT UWB, Bluetooth, ZigBee, and Wireless USB.Wireless Sensor Networks (WSN / WSAN) are, generically, networks of low-power, low-cost devices that interconnect wirelessly to collect, exchange, and sometimes act-on data collected from their physical environments - "sensor networks". Nodes typically connect in a star or mesh topology. While most individual nodes in a WSAN are expected to have limited range (Bluetooth, ZigBee, 6LoWPAN, etc.), particular nodes may be capable of more expansive communications (Wi-Fi, Cellular networks, etc.) and any individual WSAN can span a wide geographical range. An example of a WSAN would be a collection of sensors arranged throughout an agricultural facility to monitor soil moisture levels, report the data back to a computer in the main office for analysis and trend modeling, and maybe turn on automatic watering spigots if the level is too low. For wider area communications, Wireless Local Area Network (WLAN) is used. WLANs are often known by their commercial product name Wi-Fi. These systems are used to provide wireless access to other systems on the local network such as other computers, shared printers, and other such devices or even the internet. Typically a WLAN offers much better speeds and delays within the local network than an average consumer's Internet access. Older systems that provide WLAN functionality include DECT and HIPERLAN. These however are no longer in widespread use. One typical characteristic of WLANs is that they are mostly very local, without the capability of seamless movement from one network to another.Cellular networks or WAN are designed for city-wide/national/global coverage areas and seamless mobility from one access point (often defined as a Base Station) to another allowing seamless coverage for very wide areas. Cellular network technologies are often split into 2nd generation 2G, 3G and 4G networks. Originally 2G networks were voice centric or even voice only digital cellular systems (as opposed to the analog 1G networks). Typical 2G standards include GSM and IS-95 with extensions via GPRS, EDGE and 1xRTT, providing Internet access to users of originally voice centric 2G networks. Both EDGE and 1xRTT are 3G standards, as defined by the ITU, but are usually marketed as 2.9G due to their comparatively low speeds and high delays when compared to true 3G technologies.True 3G systems such as EV-DO, W-CDMA (including HSPA) provide combined circuit switched and packet switched data and voice services from the outset, usually at far better data rates than 2G networks with their extensions. All of these services can be used to provide combined mobile voice access and Internet access at remote locations.4G networks provide even higher bitrates and many architectural improvements, which are not necessarily visible to the consumer. The current 4G systems that are deployed widely are HSPA+, WIMAX and LTE. The latter two are pure packet based networks without traditional voice circuit capabilities. These networks provide voice services via VoIP.Some systems are designed for point-to-point line-of-sight communications, once two such nodes get too far apart they can no longer communicate. Other systems are designed to form a wireless mesh network using one of a variety of routing protocols. In a mesh network, when nodes get too far apart to communicate directly, they can still communicate indirectly through intermediate nodes.".
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageExternalLink lan_trainer.html.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageExternalLink KenNoblittComparison.pdf.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageExternalLink article.aspx?p=19825.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageExternalLink Mobile_WiMAX_Part1_Overview_and_Performance.pdf.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageExternalLink Mobile_WiMAX_Part2_Comparative_Analysis.pdf.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageID "8638682".
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageLength "13023".
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageOutDegree "108".
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageRevisionID "682067769".
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink 1xRTT.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink 2G.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink 3G.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink 3GPP_Long_Term_Evolution.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink 4G.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink 6LoWPAN.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink 6loWPAN.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink ANT_(network).
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink Base_Station.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink Base_station.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink Bit_rate.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink Bluetooth.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink CDMA2000.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink Category:Computing_comparisons.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink Category:Telecommunications_standards.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink Category:Wireless_networking.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink Cellular_network.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink Cellular_networks.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink Circuit_switching.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink Comparison_of_mobile_phone_standards.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink Consumer_IR.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink DECT.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink Digital_Enhanced_Cordless_Telecommunications.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink EDGE.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink EV-DO.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink Enhanced_Data_Rates_for_GSM_Evolution.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink Evolution-Data_Optimized.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink Evolved_HSPA.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink Flash-OFDM.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink GPRS.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink GSM.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink General_Packet_Radio_Service.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink HIPERLAN.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink HSPA+.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink High-Speed_Downlink_Packet_Access.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink High-Speed_Uplink_Packet_Access.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink High_Speed_Packet_Access.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink HiperLAN.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink IBurst.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink IEEE_802.11a-1999.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink IEEE_802.11ac.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink IEEE_802.11b-1999.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink IEEE_802.11g-2003.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink IEEE_802.11n.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink IEEE_802.11n-2009.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink IEEE_802.15.4.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink IEEE_802.15.4-2006.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink IMT-2000.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink IS-95.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink ISM_band.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink Internet_access.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink LTE_(telecommunication).
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink List_of_ad_hoc_routing_protocols.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink List_of_device_bandwidths.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink List_of_device_bit_rates.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink LoRaWAN.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink Lorawan.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink Maximum_throughput.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink Near_field_communication.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink Net_bit_rate.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink OFDM.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink OSI_model.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink Orthogonal_frequency-division_multiplexing.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink Packet_switching.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink Personal_Area_Network.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink Personal_area_network.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink Radio-frequency_identification.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink Spectral_efficiency.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink Spectral_efficiency_comparison_table.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink Thread_(network_protocol).
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink Throughput.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink UMTS.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink UMTS-TDD.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink Ultra-wideband.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink Universal_Mobile_Telecommunications_System.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink Voice_over_IP.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink W-CDMA.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink W-CDMA_(UMTS).
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink WIMAX.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink Wi-Fi.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink WiMAX.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink Wide_Area_Network.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink Wide_area_network.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink Wireless_LAN.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink Wireless_Local_Area_Network.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink Wireless_Sensor_Networks.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink Wireless_USB.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink Wireless_mesh_network.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink Wireless_sensor_network.
- Comparison_of_wireless_data_standards wikiPageWikiLink ZigBee.