TOKYO, Jan 25, 2021 - (JCN Newswire) - - NEC Corporation (TSE: 6701) announced today it has demonstrated multiple highly stable simultaneous terminal connections and transmission capacity in a real ...
Multiple input, multiple output (MIMO) refers to systems using multiple antennas (and correspondingly multiple channels) to transmit and receive information. MIMO is a form of spatial diversity, which ...
MIMO (multiple-input, multiple-output) technology uses multiple antennas operating on the same frequency, but with different data, to increase data rate without a corresponding increase in RF ...
Multiple antenna schemes are becoming a key part in almost every new wireless standard. For example, the UMTS/W-CDMA standard uses transmit diversity to improve the link quality in outdoor ...
Millimetre wave (mmWave) massive multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) communication systems represent a transformative advancement in wireless technology, merging the advantages of high-frequency ...
One of the key elements that will drive 5G mmWave adoption during 2021 will be the availability of appropriate customer premises equipment (CPE) and in what will be a boost to the market, NEC has ...
A basic challenge for future wireless communication systems is the contradiction between the fast growing demand for high speed wireless communications and the limited electromagnetic wave frequency ...
Technical advances in the development of telecommunication basestations and mobile stations with MIMO are demanding more functionality from test equipment. All of today’s advanced radio networks, ...
In this paper, performance analysis for different combining technique for receiver diversity in a MIMO system is presented. A general framework for diversity combining techniques in cooperative ...
Who would have thought that something as complex as radar would turn out to be one of the best sensing methods for implementing vehicle safety features like advanced driver-assistance systems (ADAS)?
We might be running out of things to do with faster processors on the desktop, but nobody feels the same way about speedier networks. Wireless data in particular can easily do with more: as ethernet ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results