IBM and MediaTek team up on uber-fast chipsets for HD streaming
IBM ain't the first big fish to dabble in the wireless HD chipset realm, and while we'd heard that the outfit was looking into the matter a year ago, things are seemingly now moving forward. Big Blue has joined hands with MediaTek in a "joint initiative to develop ultra fast chipsets that can wirelessly transmit a full-length high definition movie to and from a home PC, handheld device, retail kiosk or television set nearly as fast as a viewer can push their remote control." Apparently, the happy couple will both utilize their knowledge of millimeter wave (mmWave) radio technology in order to construct chipsets that allow end users to fling a 10GB file to its destination in just "five seconds" -- all without wires, of course. Visions of uncompressed HD streaming, syncing entire music libraries in seconds and giant bonfires fueled entirely by cabling (we kid, we kid) immediately come to mind.
[Via Slashdot]
[Via Slashdot]



















Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Geo @ Oct 22nd 2007 5:49PM
HD? Hard Drive, High Def, Ham and Donuts? What the heck is HD?
Sirocco @ Oct 22nd 2007 6:19PM
And what about that dime? It's 2 miles wide!
FleXx @ Oct 22nd 2007 6:56PM
its that small.....?!?!?!?!?!?!.........and my computer cant even run a damn .mkv file
Eldiablo @ Oct 23rd 2007 7:23AM
Ok, you can fling a 10GB video in 5seconds, but what storage medium can extract and write the data at that speed?
Patrick @ Oct 23rd 2007 2:55PM
Yeah...that's what I was thinking.