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Wi-Fi Direct device-to-device wireless product certification begins

Wi-Fi Direct device-to-device wireless product certification begins

The Wi-Fi Alliance has announced that it has begun to certify products for the new device-to-device Wi-Fi Direct technology

Searching for a Wi-Fi hotspot on those increasing number of occasions when the need to update a Facebook profile while out and about outweighs all other concerns is much easier than it used to be, but can still be a trial.

Now that the Wi-Fi Alliance has started certifying products capable of communicating with each other without the need to join up to a home, office or hotspot network, that tiresome search may soon be a thing of the past.

At any one time, a young American could be carrying around over a thousand songs, in the region of 50 videos and a vast stockpile of photos on digital devices, according to research recently undertaken by the Wi-Fi Alliance and Wakefield Research. If said youngster wanted to send any of those files to friends, then there are a number of existing technologies that allow such a transfer to take place. But if the device doesn’t have Bluetooth, or the manufacturer didn’t think to include 3G or other network capabilities, or for some bizarre reason there just isn’t a stable signal anywhere to be found, then options soon run out.

However, all that’s about to change. The Wi-Fi Alliance has designed a device-to-device wireless technology that will signal other enabled devices in the area to let them know that it can make a local connection without the need for a central network. The first products certified for Wi-Fi Direct are the Atheros XSPAN Dual-band 802.11n PCIe Mini Card (AR928x), Broadcom’s BCM43224 Dual-Band 802.11n 2×2 MIMO PCIe Half Mini Card, the Intel Centrino Advanced-N 6200, the Ralink MIMObility 802.11n 2×2 PCIe Half Mini Card and Realtek‘s RTL8192CE-VA4 HM92C00 PCIe mini card.

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