WirelessHD - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
WirelessHD is an industry-led effort to define a specification for the next generation wireless digital network interface for wireless high-definition signal transmission for ...
SiBEAM - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A founding member of the WirelessHD Consortium, SiBEAM’s first products are based on the WirelessHD 1.0 specification. The company’s Omnilink60-based WirelessHD chipsets are being ...
HAVA - Play Your TV Anywhere - HAVA Video Streamer; HAVA Place-Shifter ...
What is HAVA? HAVA is a revolutionary TV place-shifting device that allows you to watch and control live home TV from broadband Internet or data network ...
Finally – Wireless HD that Works | Popular Science
Gefen beams up to 1080p video across a room ... Like perfect cellphone reception, wireless HDMI is a radio technology that’s long been promised and has shown little sign of ...
Wireless Hd -- Engadget HD
Two years after assembling a team to fight the tyranny of wires with 60GHz beaming and less than a year after entering mass production, SiBEAM has unveiled its second generation of ...
WirelessHD LLC (Wireless_HD) on Twitter
WirelessHD, the 1st consumer electronics and tech industry-supported, HD wireless interface based on 60GHz for high quality, simple & secure home A/V networks
HAVA Wireless HD Product Details; Wireless Video Streamer, Place ...
"I bought HAVA because it was the highest tech unit on the market. More features, Better quality video, lower price - A No Brainer!" Matt B. "I bought HAVA Wireless HD because of ...
Cutting the cord: the state of wireless HD video links - Ars Technica
Three technologies and three companies will contend in the marketplace in 2009 for owning the future of wireless high-definition streaming among consumer electronic devices.
HAVA Wireless HD
HAVA Wireless HD ,quality,home,viewing,multicasting,remote,viewing,Connect,network,via,Ethernet,cable,box,composite,S-Video,component,connections,watch,TV,Windows,XP,PC,Notebook ...
Wireless HD soon to be a reality - Feb. 18, 2009
Flat-panel televisions are finally deserving of the name, and a spot to be hung on the wall, though they still require a rat's nest of cables to connect cable boxes, DVD players ...