Written By: admin on November 30, 2010 No Comment
KYOCERA Solar Modules Are Best-Performing Crystalline Modules at Desert Knowledge Australia

This collection of solar installations operating under the same environmental conditions since October 2008 allows meaningful comparisons of performance among various brands. Desert Knowledge Australia Solar Centre is not a research facility, but rather a public installation to demonstrate solar power, with output data available to anyone. Kyocera’s interpretation of data collected during a 24-month period and downloaded from DKA shows that Kyocera solar technology delivered more kilowatt hours per installed kilowatt than any other competing crystalline solar module operating for the same 24-month period at the DKA site.

Written By: admin on November 10, 2010 No Comment
KYOCERA Supplies 305 kWp of Solar Power to Villages in Mongolia

Kyocera Corporation announced that it has installed a total of 305.1kWp of solar power systems to two villages in Mongolia through the World Bank’s Renewable Energy for Rural Access Project. The installations are among the largest stand-alone solar power generating systems in the world. The systems were installed this summer and are now currently helping to provide electricity for the daily needs of the local residents. The World Bank project aims to increase electricity and improve reliability of electricity service through the use of solar energy to help improve the living conditions of the herder population and off-grid village communities.

Written By: admin on October 28, 2010 No Comment
Eye-Fi Adds a View for Web Access

The service retains the last seven days of uploads at no cost. For $5/mo or $50/yr, you can upgrade to Eye-Fi Premium, which allows unlimited storage with no expiration of links or photos and videos. Eye-Fi View isn’t enabled by default, otherwise you’d be uploading your pictorial evidence to Eye-Fi’s servers without your consent—a bad idea, regardless of whether the photos and videos remain private or not. Eye-Fi View uploads to [4] Eye-Fi Center, a Web site with the same name as the firm’s computer software.

Written By: admin on October 27, 2010 No Comment
University of Georgia Streamlines Hotspot Operation

The Georgia Center for Continuing Education Conference Center & Hotel is the world’s largest university-based conference center with 200 hotel rooms and suites, 5 executive board rooms, 18 high-tech meeting rooms, 2 auditoriums, 9,000 sq. feet of exhibit space, a banquet area that seats up to 600, and 2 in-house restaurants. Its conference center sees a wide range of events each year, including academic symposiums, training workshops, organized retreats, and weddings.

Written By: admin on October 26, 2010 No Comment
Wi-Fi Direct

Wi-Fi Direct has a few things in common with newer Bluetooth devices that pair with less effort than in the original Bluetooth schema, and in that Bluetooth and Wi-Fi Direct both advertise available services. But the notion is that you get the speed (up to 802.11n) and security (WPA2 mandatory) of Wi-Fi with enormously simpler setup than connecting to a new Wi-Fi network for a moment and then setting up a connection with a specific device. And in cases in which you don’t have an access point, such as trying to exchange a file between two mobile devices, it’s extremely irritating. (On an iOS device, both parties could have a package like GoodReader that has built in WebDAV client and server software with Bonjour discovery, but you still need an access point to which both devices are connected, and security is an overlay.)

Written By: admin on October 21, 2010 No Comment
KYOCERA Solar Module Passes Long-Term Sequential Test

The Long-Term Sequential Test which is conducted by the third party certification organization, TÜV Rheinland, evaluates solar modules with four sub-tests: Damp Heat, Thermal Cycling, Humidity Freeze, and Bypass Diode. These test the module’s overall performance and quality by putting it under harsher conditions than those standardized by the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC). Furthermore, while conventional testing dictates that a separate individual module be used per sub-test, the Long-Term Sequential Test carries out all four sub-tests on the same module, thereby evaluating it under conditions closer to those a product faces over its actual lifetime.

Written By: admin on October 9, 2010 No Comment
Sprint Resignations from Clearwire Board

Whether WiMax continues to be Clearwire’s 4G flavor of choice won’t be directly decided by this move. Sprint and Clearwire still need to prove billions of dollars invested to buy spectrum and build out a network weren’t for naught. The widespread affordable availability of LTE is still two or more years away. Verizon might be launching dozens of LTE markets this year, but the gear will be 1.0, power hungry, immature, and in limited varieties. Clearwire can’t afford to wait on LTE, and will still be deploying WiMax even if it makes a technology decision to switch to LTE in the future.

Written By: admin on October 6, 2010 No Comment
KYOCERA Install Solar-Manufacturing Sites

The Kyocera Corporation announced that it will install solar power generating systems using the company’s own solar modules at six domestic plants by March 2011, generating a total of 593kW, as part of its activities to promote environmental protection. This move will increase the number of Kyocera domestic manufacturing sites equipped with solar power generating systems to 10 – all of the company’s manufacturing sites in Japan – and the number of global group company sites to 20. Kyocera already has a number of solar power generating systems installed at its group companies inside and outside Japan, which combined with the new systems, will boost the company’s total output to 1,815kW (1.8MW).

Written By: admin on September 25, 2010 No Comment
White-Space Potential

We are seeing the end of virtually all analog television broadcasting throughout the United States. For several years television stations have been simultaneously broadcasting on two separate channels, in both analog and digital. The fact is that DTV stations can co-exist on adjacent channels without interference, which combined with the opening of so many channels formerly occupied by analog transmissions, creates a lot of prime real estate in the electro-magnetic spectrum for reallocation and purchase by other wireless users and services besides broadcasting.

Written By: admin on September 22, 2010 No Comment
JetBlue plans inflight broadband with ViaSat

JetBlue subsidiary LiveTV, which supplies live television across JetBlue’s fleet, will manage the integration of the ViaSat broadband and related components onboard the aircraft, leading the certification process and handling the installations. LiveTV will also bring Wi-Fi enabled services into the overall cabin experience, says JetBlue. ”This system will be designed for the 21st century, not just for today’s personal connectivity needs, but with the bandwidth to expand to meet tomorrow’s needs as well,” says JetBlue CEO Dave Barger. ”In just the three years since we launched BetaBlue, the first commercial aircraft with simple messaging capability, technology has advanced by generations. Rather than invest in current technology, designed to transmit broadcast video and audio, we elected to partner with ViaSat to create broadband functionality worthy of today’s interactive personal technology needs.”

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