gadgetPhreak Gadget News Blog. Futuristic Gadgets and Portable Electronics

November 16, 2006

CSIRO wins landmark WLAN lawsuit against Buffalo, more to come?

Filed under: CSIRO,aussie,australia,buffalo,dell,hp,intel,landmark,lawsuit,microsoft,netgear,patent,sue,wifi — Darren Murph @ 10:14 pm

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The same folks who brought us fire-proof plastic, air guitar clothing, and wireless air hockey apparently delivered a lot more of the WiFi technology we all utilize daily than was previously recognized. Australia’s Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization has won a landmark case against Buffalo Technology, “under which it could receive royalties from every producer of WLAN products worldwide.” US patent 5487069 — which “encompasses elements of the 802.11a/g wireless technology that is now an industry standard” — was granted to the body back in 1996, and has subsequently been utilized in seemingly every piece of wireless kit ever since. Considering their recent victory, CSIRO’s pending cases against Intel, Dell, Microsoft, HP, and Netgear definitely have roots now, and if judges continue to rule in the Aussies’ favor, the big boys could be shelling out “hundreds of millions of dollars” in back pay to cover their wrongs. Ruh roh.

[Thanks, Phil]

 

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July 20, 2006

Skype readies four WiFi phones for VoIPing public

Filed under: Skype,belkin,edge-core,netgear,smc,wifi — Paul Miller @ 4:40 pm

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We’ve been waiting on Netgear’s WiFi Skype phone for quite a while now, but what we didn’t know is that it won’t be only one of its kind for long. Skype now has four WiFi phones in the wings, the F1PP000GN-SK from Belkin (pictured), Edge-Core’s WM4201, SMC’s WSKP100, and of course Netgear’s SPH101. From the looks of things, Netgear’s entrant, which is due this month, will be the priciest at $300, but Belkin should follow in August with a quite similar offering for a much more acceptable $189. We’re pretty short on details for the rest, but we should know more soon. Like the SPH101, all of the phones will allow you to manage a buddy list, and make calls from a WiFi connection without a need for a PC in between.

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May 7, 2006

IEEE “Task Group N” rejects first 802.11n draft proposal

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In a move that came as little surprise to those who know how these things work, but that will still probably hurt manufacturers who've been releasing MIMO-enabled networking peripherals for the last few months, the IEEE 802.11 working group tasked with creating a next-gen WiFi standard has recently rejected the first draft of the highly-anticipated 802.11n. Not only did the first 802.11n draft fail to capture the 75% supermajority needed for passage, it couldn't even muster a regular majority among "Task Group N," which is a troubling development for those consumers who have already gone out and purchased pre- or draft-N gear from Linksys, Netgear, and the like. As we've reported in the past, some manufacturers had warned -- and independent testing corroborated -- that draft-N gear could negatively effect current 802.11b/g products already on the market, by hogging the available 2.5GHz bandwidth and causing performance issues on existing WLANs.  Still, taken in a historical perspective, rejection of the first draft of a proposed 802.11x specification is not uncommon, and actually seems to be the rule, rather than the exception, in the life-cycle of these multi-year, multi-party standards talks.
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April 20, 2006

Netgear’s SPH101 Skype WiFi Phone available for pre-order

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You wouldn’t
guess it from that conceptual looking pic, but Netgear is all
prepped to start shipping their standalone WiFi Skype phone on June
30th. Amazon.com is accepting pre-orders now, with the phone going for a fairly steep $250, but at least it’s marked
down $50 from the $300 list price. If you missed it the first time around, Netgear’s href="http://www.engadget.com/2006/01/04/netgear-wifi-phone-for-skype-no-pc-required/">SPH101 Skype Phone can make
Skype calls wherever you can finagle a WiFi connection, with no PC required. The phone can also manage your contact
list, and forward calls to your mobile, landline, or other Skype account. Keep reading for a couple of more realistic
pics.

[Thanks everyone who sent this in]

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border="1" src="http://www.engadget.com/media/2006/04/netgear_skype_screens.jpg" alt="" />

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April 5, 2006

Netgear intros RangeMax Next “draft spec” 802.11n products

Filed under: 300mbps,802.11n,HD,RangemaxNext,mimo,netgear,rangemax next,router — Paul Miller @ 12:45 pm

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We're not sure how this is much different than all those pre-n routers that have been floating around for a while, since a device that holds to the draft specifications of 802.11n still has quite a slim chance to actually work with official 802.11n devices. But that's not stopping Netgear from releasing a new line of RangeMax Next wireless products, which tout 300Mbps speeds and HD video streaming power. The WNR854T router supports gigabit Ethernet, while both the router and WN511T use MIMO (multi-in, multi-out) to reach those 802.11n speeds. It seems we've waited so long for 802.11n products that it has lost a lot of its appeal, but we're sure Netgear will find a way to keep busy.
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