• Welcome to TechPowerUp Forums, Guest! Please check out our forum guidelines for info related to our community.
  • The forums have been upgraded with support for dark mode. By default it will follow the setting on your system/browser. You may override it by scrolling to the end of the page and clicking the gears icon.

Wireless USB Standard Dies

malware

New Member
Joined
Nov 7, 2004
Messages
5,422 (0.72/day)
Location
Bulgaria
Processor Intel Core 2 Quad Q6600 G0 VID: 1.2125
Motherboard GIGABYTE GA-P35-DS3P rev.2.0
Cooling Thermalright Ultra-120 eXtreme + Noctua NF-S12 Fan
Memory 4x1 GB PQI DDR2 PC2-6400
Video Card(s) Colorful iGame Radeon HD 4890 1 GB GDDR5
Storage 2x 500 GB Seagate Barracuda 7200.11 32 MB RAID0
Display(s) BenQ G2400W 24-inch WideScreen LCD
Case Cooler Master COSMOS RC-1000 (sold), Cooler Master HAF-932 (delivered)
Audio Device(s) Creative X-Fi XtremeMusic + Logitech Z-5500 Digital THX
Power Supply Chieftec CFT-1000G-DF 1kW
Software Laptop: Lenovo 3000 N200 C2DT2310/3GB/120GB/GF7300/15.4"/Razer
WiQuest Communications Inc. today went bankrupt, and thus unofficially announced that the work on the Wireless USB standard will stop permanently. The Allen, Texas, company employed about 120 people focused on the wireless USB protocol. WiQuest was shipping a two-chip wireless USB solution adopted as an optional add-on to notebooks from Dell, Lenovo and Toshiba as well as consumer devices such as hubs from Belkin, D-Link and others. According to the source of this story, WiQuest couldn't resolve the technical difficulties in bringing the wireless technology to the market. The whole wireless USB solution requires two chips instead of a single one to work, also the first generation wireless USB devices offered very limited transfer speeds. Another problem that was present during all the time were the power requirements set by the OEM adopters. After the little success of the first generation wireless USB standard, WiQuest was sampling a single chip device announced back in August, but this one won't make it to production now.
We've been looking for a variety of alternatives for awhile now including new investors and acquisitions, but none looked like positive alternatives to our investors so we decided to shut the doors today,
said Todd A. Brown, vice president of worldwide sales at the company.

View at TechPowerUp Main Site
 
Sorry to see them fail, but while wireless USB is a neat solution to solving cable issues, there is a competing product (blutooth) that we all hate and is plagued by security issues with hot-plug-and-play, and there is a BETTER product, which is to "connect" devices to a network, whether LAN or internet. Wireless ethernet is a better solution. It just means a BIGGER investment for the consumer (ie wireless AP), and a bigger investment for the product manufacturer (ie network accessable protocol). Nonetheless, network connectivity is the way to go. WHO wants a wireless USB printer attached to ONE DEVICE and not available to anyone else? To then use print sharing is just plain silly, requiring both computers on at the same time. And as offices are moving to hot desks, thin and think clients, and cloud computing, we need all devices connect to the LAN/server. Wireless USB doesnt do that and would give you nowhere to connect to!

So, sorry to see you go, but, IMO, you never had a product.
 
Sorry to see them fail, but while wireless USB is a neat solution to solving cable issues, there is a competing product (blutooth) that we all hate and is plagued by security issues with hot-plug-and-play, and there is a BETTER product, which is to "connect" devices to a network, whether LAN or internet. Wireless ethernet is a better solution. It just means a BIGGER investment for the consumer (ie wireless AP), and a bigger investment for the product manufacturer (ie network accessable protocol). Nonetheless, network connectivity is the way to go. WHO wants a wireless USB printer attached to ONE DEVICE and not available to anyone else? To then use print sharing is just plain silly, requiring both computers on at the same time. And as offices are moving to hot desks and cloud computing, we need all devices going to a server. Wireless USB doesnt do that.

So, sorry to see you go, but, IMO, you never had a product.

Indeed, wifi mouse, wifi keyboard, wifi coffee warmer, wifi minifan. Not all devices would fit in a network. Though agree many will, ie harddrives, printers, etc.
Your link to companies doesn't work though, wifi in't exactly the greatest thing for an office. Performance is crap, it's unreliable, not secure, etc. Of course, if the technology improves to be on par with wired networks on those points, which no doubt happens eventually, it's a great thing.
 
Much better to have a printer with built in wi-fi.
 
Indeed, wifi mouse, wifi keyboard, wifi coffee warmer, wifi minifan.
LOL.

Corporate wifi is fine for printers, PDAs, phones, etc. I do agree it is hopeless for data and internet networking. And security is an issue, agreed.

But really, what applications were there (sensible ones) for wireless USB that arent already covered by blutooth or arent better covered by wifi?
 
I was thinking their main emphasis was more elimination of wires. Speakers, Mice, Keyboard, etc...
 
i have a Netgear wireless USB adaptor for one of the pcs that has no access to a wired connection and i find this little thing very useful, saved me the time of running a wire across half the house. Sorry to see them go.
 
Bluetooth???
 
i have a Netgear wireless USB adaptor for one of the pcs that has no access to a wired connection and i find this little thing very useful, saved me the time of running a wire across half the house. Sorry to see them go.

A USB adapter with wifi is DIFFERENT from wireless USB. What you have is a wireless ethernet adapter as a USB dongle thingie, not "wireless USB"! Confusing, I know.

What these guys were doing was replacing the USB wire to your mouse, speakers, or keyboard by going "wireless USB". The only problem is that these devices need POWER. LOL. So you still need a cable. :nutkick:
 
A USB adapter with wifi is DIFFERENT from wireless USB. What you have is a wireless ethernet adapter as a USB dongle thingie, not "wireless USB"! Confusing, I know.

What these guys were doing was replacing the USB wire to your mouse, speakers, or keyboard by going "wireless USB". The only problem is that these devices need POWER. LOL. So you still need a cable. :nutkick:

ahhh, thnx!
 
Back
Top