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U.K. Firm Says It’s Overcome White-Space Interference
11/16/2009
CAMBRIDGE, ENGLAND: Cambridge
Consultants, a U.K.-based international technology development and consultancy
company, says it has developed a new low-cost cognitive radio technology that
allows devices to transmit without interference over the white space
frequencies.
Although the company has not released details about its “InCognito” technology,
it says that it believes that “we will start to see the first cognitive radio-enabled
products in mid-2010 and that the market will develop quickly.”
Cambridge Consultants, a subsidiary of Altran, Europe’s largest technology
consultancy, has considerable experience in developing wireless technologies
and has helped launch a number of new standards for products including
Bluetooth, DECT and Zigbee. The company said it is offering its platform to the
CogNeA Alliance, a group of consumer electronics companies dedicated to
developing technologies for the white space band and including Philips, Samsung
Electro-Mechanics, ETRI and Georgia Tech.
The FCC last year voted to allow the use of unlicensed wireless devices to
operate in white spaces--unoccupied portions of the TV spectrum band that lay
between channels to prevent interference. Broadcasters have vehemently opposed
the use of such devices, claiming that they will interfere with TV reception.
“We’ve seen so much game-changing innovation in the unlicensed 2.4 GHz band,
but I believe the FCC’s decision to open up the white-space radio frequencies
for innovation promises even more,” said Luke D’Arcy, of Cambridge Consultants.
“We will quickly see a wave of innovation in wireless products and services
around 700 MHz, bringing benefits both to consumers and to the innovative
businesses that move quickly into the white-space market,”
D’Arcy also said the company’s technology will address broadcasters’ concerns
over interference.
“Based on highly complex cognitive spectral-sensing radio technology which,
until now, has only been used in defense and security applications, the
InCognito platform enables white-space radios to quickly and accurately detect
and avoid other broadcasts,” he said. -- from TV Technology
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