INTEL® CENTRINO™ MOBILE TECHNOLOGY PROVIDES PERFORMANCE BOOST
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The Intel PRO/Wireless 2200BG network connection is a standards-based and Wi-Fi CERTIFIED* wireless local area network (WLAN) solution that allows up to 54 million bits of data to be transferred per second. It is designed to maintain high throughput at longer ranges in office or home environments, along with efficient use of power to enable longer system battery life. The Intel PRO/Wireless 2200BG network connection is also software upgradeable, allowing it to support future security and other service enhancements.
"With support for open industry standards, the Intel PRO/Wireless 2200BG network connection offers more than three times higher performance than stand-alone 802.11b solutions," said Jim Johnson, Intel vice president and general manager of the Wireless Networking Group. "The improved performance of 802.11g combined with strong power management features help deliver leading connectivity capabilities across a wide range of Wi-Fi CERTIFIED* access points."
"Standards-based solutions are critical to ensure Wi-Fi capable devices work across a variety of networks, ensuring a high-quality, consistent user experience," Johnson said. "The Intel PRO/Wireless 2200BG network connection is a high-performance solution that will enhance the wireless networking experience for business professionals and consumers using Intel Centrino mobile technology-based notebook PCs."
The Intel PRO/Wireless 2200BG network connection consists of a communications and radio chip, both designed and developed by Intel at its wireless networking facilities in Haifa, Israel and San Diego.
Intel to Present Motion Picture Using Wireless Computing at Sundance Film Festival
To demonstrate the types of advanced digital media applications that can be transferred wirelessly over the Internet using the Intel PRO/Wireless 2200BG network connection, Intel and The Sundance Film Festival will host a technology demonstration, Saturday, Jan. 17, at the festival in Park City, Utah. In the demonstration, the InDigEnt motion picture November, directed by Greg Harrison and starring Courtney Cox and Anne Archer, will be presented using 802.11g technology to wirelessly broadcast the high-definition film to moviegoers who will view it on new Sony VAIO* notebook PCs based on Intel Centrino mobile technology.
"Out of the more than 250 films that will be screened at Sundance this year, November is the only one that is going to be seen via broadband wireless technology," said Sean Maloney, Intel executive vice president and general manager of the Intel Communications Group. "Broadband wireless technology is going to allow consumers to enjoy digital media in exciting and non-traditional ways."
"In recent years the festival has been showing an increasing number of films that have been produced and displayed digitally," said Ian Calderon, director of digital initiatives for the Sundance Institute. "This year with the support of Intel, the 2004 Sundance Film Festival will for the first time present a wireless broadcast of a high-definition film to festival attendees. The possibility of experiencing extraordinary quality images and sound on a notebook computer through wireless opens new avenues for the film community, and it marks the next stage in the delivery of digital films to the film-going audience."