Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Sign in / up
The Register

Networks

This article is more than1 year old

ALi preps low-cost WLAN chip for PCs, DVDs

Dual band, triple mode

iconTony Smith
Fri 27 Jun 2003 //09:15 UTC

ALi, the chip maker formerly known as Acer Labs, has launched its first dual-band, triple-mode wireless networking chip, pitching the part at low-cost computing and home entertainment applications.

The M4305 MAC/baseband chip operates in the 2.4GHz band to provide 802.11b and 802.11g access, and in the 5GHz band for 802.11a networking.

The chip also supports the proposed 802.11h extension standard, which will upgrade 802.11a to European WLAN standards, and the proposed 802.11i security standard. Both 802.11i and 802.11h are not expected to be ratified until late this year or early 2004. 802.11i includes Wi-Fi Protected Access (WPA), the latest WLAN security spec., launched recently by the Wi-Fi Alliance.

The chip is designed to be incorporated into PCI, PC Card and Mini PCI cards, and features extensive and power management systems, ALi said. Because the chip offloads some computation work to the host's processor, the power management system not only works to reduce the M4305's consumption but to minimise CPU utilisation wherever possible.

The M4305 uses the host processor because it enables ALi to ship the chip without its own processing core and associated on-chip memory. The result is a smaller, cheaper product. ALi is targeting the product at low-end notebooks and desktop PCs.

It also has its eye on non-computing applications such as DVDs, TVs and Hi-Fi kit

The M4305 will operate with a multi-mode radio chip from Envara. Pricing has yet to be published, but volume production is expected sometime in the second half of the year. ®


More about

More like these
×

More about

Narrower topics

Broader topics

More about


More about

More like these
×

More about

Narrower topics

Broader topics

TIP US OFF

Send us news


Other stories you might like

Mind the gap – in mobile coverage: UK train signal to stay patchy till 2030

Minister pins hopes on low Earth orbit satellites to plug crap rail connectivity
Networks16 Oct 2025 |17

Vodafone keels over, cutting off millions of mobile and broadband customers

Outage knocks out phones, broadband – even telco's own status page
Networks13 Oct 2025 |73

BT promises 5G Standalone for 99% of the UK by 2030

Because 100% would just be silly
Networks2 Oct 2025 |32

How TeamViewer builds enterprise trust through security-first design

What to do when even your espresso machine needs end-to-end encryption
Sponsored Feature

SpaceX bulks up Starlink Direct to Cell with $17B EchoStar spectrum deal

Dreams of one satellite constellation die so another can live
Networks9 Sep 2025 |6

Windows Mobile Plans app to be disconnected in 2026

Microsoft shifts cellular management to Settings and the web
Applications29 Aug 2025 |7

Dialing Earth: Skylo set to leapfrog T-Mobile and offer voice calls via satellite

Only a few Android phones will be able to support the service
Networks28 Aug 2025 |4

Mobile industry charts course to smartphone satellite broadband

First services go live, but full-featured coverage depends on new chips, standards, and constellations
Networks6 Aug 2025 |6

VodafoneThree's a crowd – now comes the hard bit

29M customers, four radio suppliers, and one hell of a network headache
Networks2 Jun 2025 |67

UK satellite smartphone services could get green light this year

At last, cell service from SPAAAAAACE
Networks26 Mar 2025 |29

Virgin Media O2 patches hole that let callers snoop on your coordinates

Researcher finds VoLTE metadata could be used to locate users within 100 meters
Security20 May 2025 |33

Satellite phone tech coming to your mobe this year – but who pays for it?

Operators mulling whether to price tech into subs, says report, which notes Musk's Starlink satellite dominance
Networks10 Apr 2025 |45

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp