Broadcom adds WiFi Direct to its embedded device platform, furthers our internet-of-things future

Broadcom, wireless. Peanut butter, jelly. Together, they just work. So today’s announcement that the company is adding WiFi Direct to its WICED (Wireless Internet Connectivity for Embedded Devices) platform feels pretty natural. The firm believes that WICED Direct will allow OEMs to develop wearable sensors — pedometers, heart-rate monitors, keycards — and clothing that transmit everyday data to the cloud via a connected smartphone or tablet. This would help push along the internet of things movement that’s been bandied about so much recently, and maybe even ensure you aren’t locked out of the house again.

[Image credit: Brandon Shigeta / Flickr]

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BlackBerry OS 10.2 leak reveals actionable notifications, WiFi Direct and more

BlackBerry OS 102 leak reveals actionable notifications, WiFi Direct and more

BlackBerry 10 users rejoice! The awesome folks over at the CrackBerry forums have leaked a few screenshots of BlackBerry’s upcoming OS 10.2 (build 10.2.0.483, to be exact) which reveal a bunch of new features, including actionable notifications and WiFi Direct. With the former, you’ll be able to pull down on notifications and respond to them (as shown above). This OS version will also provide a way to mute notifications or view them on the lock screen. WiFi Direct, which was hinted at during BlackBerry Live, is now confirmed with this build. It enables simple peer-to-peer wireless connectivity between various devices like phones, tablets, printers and TVs. This update also include a new native Evernote app, settings app and app manager. Find out more at the source link below.

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Via: PhoneArena

Source: CrackBerry forums

Wikipad CEO James Bower defends his gaming tablet’s $500 pricing, why one device beats two

Why does the Wikipad cost $500 dollars CEO James Bower explains

No matter which way you cut it, the Android-based Wikipad gaming tablet — dubbed as much despite not having any connection to Wikipedia — is unusually expensive. As a 10.1-inch Android tablet, it’s comparably priced with the leaders of the market (of the Apple and Samsung variety). The obvious problem comparatively with the big dogs: visibility. What is Wikipad, anyway? And who made it?

“This is our first product into the market,” consummate salesman and Wikipad CEO James Bower told us in an interview earlier this week — yes, the company’s name is shared with its first product. “We’ve self-funded the whole concept to this point with a couple of us founders. No VC money or anything,” he said (the company did, however, just close its first round of venture capital funding for marketing costs, post-development). Bower’s company took the idea of an Android-based gaming tablet with a proprietary, physical (and removable) gamepad from concept to reality in the last year, first revealing the tablet at CES 2012. “We’ve been able to accomplish a lot very efficiently and very effectively to this point,” Bower said, in reference to the approximately 80 people who created the device.

That said, despite our positive hands-on time with the Wikipad (even in its prototype state), $500 is a heck of a lot of money to plunk down on an unproven device from an unproven company. The argument gets harder when you remember Sony’s PlayStation Vita — an arguably much nicer device with a far larger library of gaming content that costs half the Wikipad’s price at $249.99. Bower doesn’t see the logic in this argument. “It’s double the price, but it’s also double the size,” he pointed out. “If you buy a tablet that’s seven inches, you can get a $199 tablet — it’s called a Google Nexus or a Kindle Fire. If you’re gonna get a full 10-inch tablet, a tablet to this quality, you’re gonna spend $499 to $749 … if we were talking about a 7-inch device or a 5-inch device, and we were at this price point, then it’d be a different story.” Admittedly, the tablet — as a standalone device — isn’t too shabby. But will it woo consumers away from the likes of Apple and Samsung? Bower hopes as much, but we’re not so sure.

Continue reading Wikipad CEO James Bower defends his gaming tablet’s $500 pricing, why one device beats two

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Wikipad CEO James Bower defends his gaming tablet’s $500 pricing, why one device beats two originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 28 Sep 2012 16:15:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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WiFi alliance begins Tunneled Direct Link Setup certification, hopes to improve media streaming

WiFi alliance begins Tunneled Direct Link Setup certification, hopes to improve media streaming

You can thank the WiFi alliance for a number of things, and soon you can add TDLS to that list. That’s Tunneled Direct Link Setup, if you were wondering, and it’s a standard for creating direct links between devices. If this sounds familiar, that’s understandable, but TDLS has its own tricks, like working in the background of a network to optimize performance, and it can even work over a WiFi Direct connection. For example two compliant devices can measure the signal strength on the network, and determine if a direct link would be better or not. TDLS also allows devices to communicate at the fastest standard available (802.11b / g / n etc.) even if this is superior to that available on the rest of your hardware. As this is a client-based protocol, you won’t need to upgrade your access point either. If this hasn’t got implications for better media streaming written all over it, we don’t know what has. Especially as the certification is available to TVs, tablets, phones, cameras and gaming devices. There’s only a handful of test products sporting the official approval at this time, but with names such as Broadcom, Marvell and Realtek in the mix, it shouldn’t be long before it starts finding its way into front rooms and pockets proper.

Continue reading WiFi alliance begins Tunneled Direct Link Setup certification, hopes to improve media streaming

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WiFi alliance begins Tunneled Direct Link Setup certification, hopes to improve media streaming originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 26 Aug 2012 18:47:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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GM testing pedestrian detection system powered by WiFi Direct (video)

GM testing pedestrian detection system powered by WiFi Direct

Car makers have been peddling wireless pedestrian avoidance systems almost as long as there have been automobiles. (We believe one of the earliest was called the “side view mirror.”) GM’s new experiment though, differs from other implementations by skipping out on the 3G, cameras and radar — instead going for a model built around WiFi Direct. The peer-to-peer 802.11 standard hasn’t exactly set the world on fire, but the WiFi Alliance is diligently tweaking the platform and apparently GM thinks its a perfect match for connecting cars, cyclists and pedestrians to each other. Unlike 3G-based systems, there’s little lag between locating and identifying bikes or people crossing the street since the signal doesn’t have to be bounced off a satellite. It also has a leg up on radar detection since WiFi can be a two way pipeline — alerting someone out for a stroll of an oncoming vehicle. Of course, it will be some time before anything like this actually makes it into a production vehicle. But, in the meantime, you can check out the PR and video after the break.

Continue reading GM testing pedestrian detection system powered by WiFi Direct (video)

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GM testing pedestrian detection system powered by WiFi Direct (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 27 Jul 2012 15:54:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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WiFi Direct headed for a revamp: simpler integration, better support

WiFi Direct headed for a revamp: simpler integration, better support

We love WiFi Direct, we do, but there’s no denying the standard has failed to take the world by storm. The WiFi Alliance is going back to the drawing board and looking to streamline its system of connecting devices. A new Wi-Fi Direct Services task group was formed last month, charged with building new tools for helping apps and devices work together. The plan is to have what amounts to a complete revamp of the WiFi Direct standard within 12 to 18 months. One of the keys will be exposing the feature more directly to end users. Often it hides in the background, but the alliance is working on a way for apps to advertise their capabilities to each other and consumers. Developers have also struggled with poorly defined hooks that often lead to incompatible products. Will 2013 finally be the year that WiFi Direct takes off? Who can say. Considering the break-neck pace our technological world moves at, something better may have come along by the time the WiFi Alliance gets its act together.

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WiFi Direct headed for a revamp: simpler integration, better support originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 13 Jul 2012 02:16:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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