Design center
Learning center
Ten things to consider when securing an embedded 802.11 Wi-Fi device
September 01, 2010
The risks to users of wireless technology have increased as the popularity of wireless grows. Hackers are becoming more sophisticated so it's very important that wireless device manufacturers secure their devices properly. From wireless authentication protocols to the environment in which the device ...
The risks to users of wireless technology have increased as the popularity of wireless grows. Hackers are becoming more sophisticated so it's very important that wireless device manufacturers secure their devices properly. From wireless authentication protocols to the environment in which the device ...
- Lithium battery materials produced cheaper and faster with microwave furnace systems
- How to save money by using custom design GaAs MMICs
- iPad-type tablets open new opportunities for wireless chip vendors
- TriQuint to present new TQP15 process at EuMW
- 3D design software speeds response time for RF connector specialist
- Wireless — the fourth utility
- Real-time oscilloscopes from Rohde & Schwarz boast the first digital trigger and long acquisition times
- Wireless broadband enabler delivers 2 Mbps or more to rural areas without DSL
- DECT ULP drives acceptance of wireless sensor networks
- Identifying and closing the customer experience gap
Solving industrial monitoring challenges through wireless I/O
Thu, 26 Aug 2010 03:08:00 GMT
Remote monitoring and control presents many challenges calling for creative solutions. Whether adding remote I/O to a legacy PLC, extending analog and digital monitoring to a remote plant, or connecting serial devices without creating new hardwired links, industrial users want solutions that are simple to implement, reliable and cost-effective. This white paper considers the capabilities needed in wireless I/O products and suggests what is important in equipment, installation and support.
Remote monitoring and control presents many challenges calling for creative solutions. Whether adding remote I/O to a legacy PLC, extending analog and digital monitoring to a remote plant, or connecting serial devices without creating new hardwired links, industrial users want solutions that are simple to implement, reliable and cost-effective. This white paper considers the capabilities needed in wireless I/O products and suggests what is important in equipment, installation and support.
- AWR SIP white Paper
- 10 things to consider when securing an embedded 802.11 Wi-Fi wireless device
- AWR Nonlinear Modeling White Paper
- Enabling small cells with TI's new multicore SoC
- Techniques for System Design in Embedded Environments
- Improved Trak models for beam-generated magnetic fields
- TETRA Enhanced Data Services on TETRA 1 Hardware
- A Novel Technique of MCU Firmware Upgrade from a Remote Server using 3G Modem
Today's news
- Intel will run wireless as separate business
- Radio frequency MEMS to rescue smartphones from antenna problems
- Tunable filters based on RF MEMS for mobile phones to raise performance bar
- Higher frequency RFID and RTLS-enabled asset management system revenues forecast to reach $845 million in 2014
- Shipments of Bluetooth, NFC, UWB, 802.15.4 and Wi-Fi ICs to increase 20 percent in 2010
- Consumer telematics users to reach 211 million by 2015, says ABI Research
- Intel to acquire Infineon’s Wireless Solutions business
- Wireless Innovation Forum opens Europe office
- Murata Electronics North America invests in RF Monolithics
- Tiered data pricing looming for mobile broadband says ABI Research
New Products
- High performance SOT-89 power amplifier gain blocks target cellular infrastructure
- Antenna families add 2.4 GHz versions
- Code-hopping receiver decoder enables implementation of security oriented RF remote control systems
- AWR releases Visual System Simulator 2010
- 13 GHz high speed logic in plastic SMT
- Enhanced audio scrambler and sub-audio signalling processor IC targets analog two-way radios
- Tires to communicate with smartphone
- System-on-chip device family for ZigBee RF4CE consumer electronics
- Wireless LAN chips feature advanced beam-forming for best-in-class reach
- UHF Gen 2 reader chip enables low-cost embedded RFID readers
Next events
September 26, 2010
to October 01, 2010
- Exhibitions
European Microwave Week - Paris
October 20, 2010
to October 21, 2010
- Exhibitions
Wireless Networks - London
October 26, 2010
to October 28, 2010
- Exhibitions
Broadband World Forum - Paris
November 09, 2010
to November 13, 2010
- Exhibitions
electronica - Munich
MOST POPULAR NEWS
- Radio frequency MEMS to rescue smartphones from antenna problems
- Nujira makes multimillion dollar deal for PA power saver
- Intel will run wireless as separate business
- Wireless Innovation Forum opens Europe office
- Mainstream universal controller to offer RF, IR, and color display uses Nordic 2.4 GHz wireless connectivity
- Handheld spectrum analyzer covers up to 43 GHz
- Pico cell links smartphones to cable-TV nets
- Mindspeed describes 26-core basestation DSP
- 280 million wireless combo chipsets to ship by the end of 2010
- Turkcell deploys Andrew remote monitoring and control for base stations
Interview
Technical papers
- Solving industrial monitoring challenges through wireless I/O
- AWR SIP white Paper
- 10 things to consider when securing an embedded 802.11 Wi-Fi wireless device
- AWR Nonlinear Modeling White Paper
- Enabling small cells with TI's new multicore SoC
- Techniques for System Design in Embedded Environments
- Improved Trak models for beam-generated magnetic fields
- TETRA Enhanced Data Services on TETRA 1 Hardware
- A Novel Technique of MCU Firmware Upgrade from a Remote Server using 3G Modem
Poll
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This site contains articles under license from EETimes Group , a division of United Business Media LLC.


