Austin, Tex.— Freescale Semiconductor hopes to ease development of ZigBee applications with the launching of its BeeKit wireless connectivity tool kit. BeeKit provides an easy-to-use interface and ...
The MarketWatch News Department was not involved in the creation of this content. DSR Corporation (DSR) today announced that its cross-platform Zigbee(R) stack, ZBOSS, now supports NXP(R) ...
Jennic Ltd.'s JenNet is a free proprietary IEEE 802.15.4 networking stack for its 32-bit single-chip wireless microcontrollers. JenNet is specially designed to be easy to use and is fully scalable ...
XDA Developers on MSN
Zigbee 4.0 supports more than 2.4 GHz, and it might finally end the smart home protocol war
The move to 900MHz could change everything.
A ZigBee PRO software stack designed to run on the JN5139 32-bit single-chip wireless microcontroller supports both embedded single-chip and co-processor configurations. When operating as an embedded ...
A San Diego start-up apparently is the first company with commercially available tools for connecting everything from smoke detectors to heart monitors over low-power wireless nets based on the IEEE ...
Wireless embedded networks hold great promise for deployment in residential and commercial building-automation, industrial plant monitoring, and other wireless sensing and control applications. An ...
ZigBee, the emerging wireless technology that could give billions of electronic devices a connection to the Internet, has moved another small step towards wide-scale commercial deployment. A ...
TinyOS is a compact operating system (OS) designed to support small wireless platforms like 8-bit ZigBeebased microcontroller solutions. It's an open-source project that was first developed at U.C.
On this week's episode of the HomeKit Insider podcast, we cover the release of Zigbee 4.0 and the new long-range Suzi wireless standard with special guest Genie Peshkova from the Connectivity ...
Ready for yet another wireless networking standard? Motorola is working on one code-named ZigBee, which works on the 802.15.4 specification, and supposedly will be used to wirelessly control all sorts ...
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