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July 23, 2008 3:00 AM PDT

Inching closer to wireless hi-def video

by Erica Ogg
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The backers of Wireless Home Digital Interface plan to announce they are officially banding together Wednesday. But we're still months, or even a year from true, interoperable devices that can send high-definition video between themselves.

Wireless Home Digital Interface, or WHDI, sends uncompressed, high-definition video signals over the unlicensed 5-Gigahertz band. The backers of it say its immune to obstructions like walls and can deliver a signal that covers an entire home--that means setting up a set-top box in a basement and connecting it wirelessly to a 1080p TV in an upstairs bedroom.

But we've been hearing this stuff for years. Several different standards have been proposed, and consumer electronics vendors have even announced products, but they've been very slow to trickle out to the market.

Belkin FlyWire

One of the few wireless HD video devices that's made it to market.

(Credit: Belkin)

There's been more movement in this industry of late (Sony, and Sharp have released wireless HD video products this year, and Belkin is promising something for October), but we're still waiting for the floodgates to open where all the top-tier manufacturers have TVs with a wireless HD connectivity option.

Amimon, the chipmaker behind the WHDI technology, says that time is next year. WHDI can count Hitachi, Motorola, Sony, Samsung, and Sharp among its charter members, and once the standard is completed later this year, consumers will have many more options for wireless HD video products, according to Amimon's chief executive, Yoav Nissan-Cohen.

"This year you buy products that solve the problem you have, like Belkin's FlyWire kit," said Nissan-Cohen. It doesn't yet meet the standard's goal of having any source using WHDI be able to connect to any screen, but he says that's fine for now.

"Next year you can get multi-vendor, interoperable devices," he said.

Though Nissan-Cohen says the WHDI standard is following along the same path and attempting to build a consortium the way the HDMI standard did--lining up the technology and key hardware players one by one--we've been hearing "next year" for a while now when it comes to this space. Plus, WHDI isn't the only game in town.

In fact, it's got several competitors. WirelessHD is one: it uses the 60-Gigahertz band to send high-def video between devices, though it is limited to one room and can't go through walls. But it does have some of the same vendors on board, like Sony and Samsung. There's also ultrawideband solutions, but they've had more trouble getting off the ground.

Still, Nissan-Cohen of Amimon says next year you'll see TVs that have wireless receivers built in for a premium of approximately $100 to $200 (right now an add-on WHDI dongle costs about $400 or $500). And in a three to five years, or when shipping volumes reach 10 million or higher, the wireless HD device should only cost $10 extra to have the technology inside. By then, he says it will be the "default option to every TV and every source device."

I certainly hope so, but for now, we'll take this one with the requisite grain of salt.

Erica Ogg is a CNET News reporter who covers Apple, HP, Dell, and other PC makers, as well as the consumer electronics industry. She's also one of the hosts of CNET News' Daily Podcast. In her non-work life, she's a history geek, a loyal Dodgers fan, and a mac-and-cheese connoisseur. E-mail Erica.
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by mctroyd July 23, 2008 5:59 PM PDT
Have people really become so lazy that they can't be bothered to simply plug in a cable? What happens when every other house and apartment has this technology, as with Wi-Fi now? Do we simply deal with the cross-talk and accept the picture quality loss as inevitable?

For $100 to $200 you can pay an installer to professionally run cable through the wall and terminate at wall plates... nice, neat, clean, reliable, and upgrade-proof.
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by vbp1 July 24, 2008 7:50 AM PDT
I do not think it's lasyness, can you immagine if you could place your TV at/on any wall in your house and have all the extrass like DVD/AMP etk. tacked away some where out of sight.
an option not to run cables all over the house.
it is more of the convinience thing
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by jdb5388 July 24, 2008 11:23 AM PDT
100 to 200 dollars is nothing compared to the price of HDMI cables running to several tv's. Plus it would be great to watch DVR shows from one box on any tv in the house.
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by Nighteye19 July 24, 2008 12:54 PM PDT
I agree. This could turn into a mess like Wi-Fi is now in congested areas. You will have 15 people within signal range fighting over the same band frequency, not to mention other tech devices like phones that interfere too. And does this mean I can just tap into my neighbors' signals and see what they are watching? Didn't see anything about any kind of security built into these devices.
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by retroblu September 29, 2008 1:50 PM PDT
i agree, how do people distinguish between theres and the neighbors, would it be like walkie talkies where you can set channels and the tx and rx would have to be on the same channels, and how many channels(digits in a channel) would there be available if that was the cause
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