What we found on the web about Splashpower
Splashpower Ltd. was a United Kingdom-based company founded in June 2001. It had been attempting to develop technology for wireless charging of portable devices such as mobile ...
2001: Splashpower formed in the UK. Uses coupled resonant coils in a flat "pad" style to transfer tens of watts into a variety of consumer devices, including lamp, phone, PDA, iPod ...
SplashPower, the UK inductive charging company that has been struggling to create a product since 2001, has been bought up by Alticor-subsidiary Fulton Innovation.
We're never going to give up the dream of wireless charging, but it looks like the high costs of developing the technology plus the battle to build it into portable devices has ...
Splashpower Ltd., a startup that has developed a wireless inductive electrical charging system for portable electronic equipment, is preparing to launch a second wave of products ...
PowerPulse.Net, The Web s Leading Power Electronics Publication, is updated every business day with exclusive news from the power electronics, distributed generation, and energy ...
Wireless power specialist Splashpower (Cambridge , England) has been acquired by U.S. group Altcor Inc. for an undisclosed sum from the administrators. The British start-up has ...
Splashpower to make bigger wireless splash at Fulton Innovation John Walko EE Times Europe 05/07/2008 2:30 AM EST URL: http://www.eetimes.com/cleantech/207600102
Splashpower, the emerging global major in evolving wireless solutions for portable, has added two new products to its offering line. The company will be shipping its Multi ...
LONDON — Wireless power specialist Splashpower (Cambridge , England) has been acquired by U.S. group Altcor Inc. for an undisclosed sum from the administrators.
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Splashpower Ltd. was a United Kingdom-based company founded in June 2001. It had been attempting to develop technology for wireless charging of portable devices such as mobile phones, personal digital assistants, mp3 players and cameras. Their system worked through electromagnetic induction, adding a free positioning induction loop (at the "SplashPad") to the conventional fix induction loop at the wallplug (used to shift between AC and DC currents). According to the company's claims, rechargeable devices equipped with a small SplashModule were placed upon a mousepad-sized SplashPad and had their batteries recharged at a normal rate.

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