Laptops That Don't Need USB Cables
New Dell and Lenovo notebooks include embedded wireless USB chips for 
connecting to peripherals.
Yardena Arar, PC World

Monday, July 23, 2007 5:00 PM PDT
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Dell and Lenovo today announced the first notebooks with embedded Certified 
Wireless USB chips, which will enable cable-free connections to USB peripherals
hooked up to Certified Wireless USB hubs that D-Link and IOGear also announced.

Additionally, D-Link and IOGear announced Certified Wireless USB adapters that 
you can plug into USB ports to add the functionality to notebooks and PCs
that don't have it built in. 

The notebooks (the 
Dell Inspiron 1720
 and 
Lenovo ThinkPad T61
 and T62p), wireless hubs, and wireless USB adapters from 
D-Link
 and 
IOGear
 are the first products to receive Wireless USB Certification from the USB 
Implementers Forum. They're expected to ship in time for back-to-school and 
holiday-season
purchases. 

Eventually, these notebooks and other PCs equipped with wireless USB chips will 
be able to connect to a new generation of peripherals that will also carry
embedded wireless USB. But for now, the most likely use will be with legacy USB 
peripherals connected to wireless USB hubs. You could, for example, use
one of the notebooks to print documents on a conventional USB printer plugged 
into a wireless USB hub. 

How It Works

Wireless USB uses ultra-wideband technology, which enables short-range 
connections (15 to 30 feet) at much faster speeds (up to 480 megabits per second
at 10 feet and 110 mbps at 30 feet) than Bluetooth while consuming much less 
power than Wi-Fi.

The USB Implementers Forum's certification program is meant to do for Certified 
Wireless USB what the Wi-Fi Alliance's certification programs have done
for various flavors of Wi-Fi: Assure consumers that products from different 
vendors are compatible. The products will carry a 
Certified Wireless USB logo.

http://www.pcworld.com/article/id,134989-pg,1/article.html

Vikas Kapoor,
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