The medical-device wireless-hacking issue made 60 Minutes last night. This is a problem that needs to be addressed now.
Wrapping up The Great Mobile Unified Communications Test – lessons learned, and a few strategies for next time.
A question from a reader deserves a serious, thoughtful answer – so here goes.
This is the part where it usually says, “trust me; there’s wireless in here somewhere”. This time there isn’t. The following is a bit of a self-indulgent travelogue, but I think you will enjoy it regardless.
802.11ac was all over Interop New York, and every major vendor is now in the gigabit-wireless game. 2014 is consequently shaping up to be a blowout year for the industry, with what may very well be the last big Wi-Fi standard.
Here are the results of the Mobile Unified Communications testing project.
This Thursday, I’m speaking in a Webinar on desktop virtualization in healthcare. We’re going to look at how one of the key enabling technologies for IT mobility will specifically benefit healthcare applications and operations.
Continuing our discussion of low-cost, Wi-Fi-based mobile communications, here are the details on the solution I used.
Already a leader in Wi-Fi spectral analysis, Fluke Networks has announced a powerful, low-cost spectrum analyzer for cellular that will prove invaluable in solving a broad range of coverage and performance issues.
Is anyone at Apple still trying at all? You can’t lead the industry with non-announcements like this one.