Question by
so far the best i can come up with is
“Wireless technology is the transfer of information accomplished without the use of wires or cables”
but it sounds like it could be improved a little more
thankyou anoop for quoting wikipedia to me, but i want a short, one sentence definition. and anoop, if you purge text from wikipedia at least admit to it in your resouces area
eval, i have now got:
“Wireless technology is technology that allows communication between devices without the need for connectinge wires or cables”
i think that’s what ill put in my slideshow, thanks
ps.
it’s a technology comparison for prog. and web design, i am comparing wireless USB and bluetooth
Best answer:
Answer by Eval666
Wireless technology is… Communication without any wires.
What do you think? Answer below!
The term wireless is normally used to refer to any type of electrical or electronic operation which is accomplished without the use of a “hard wired” connection. Wireless communication is the transfer of information over a distance without the use of electrical conductors or “wires”.[1] The distances involved may be short (a few meters as in television remote control) or very long (thousands or even millions of kilometers for radio communications). When the context is clear the term is often simply shortened to “wireless”. Wireless communications is generally considered to be a branch of telecommunications.
The term “wireless” has become a generic and all-encompassing word used to describe communications in which electromagnetic waves or RF (rather than some form of wire) carry a signal over part or the entire communication path. Common examples of wireless equipment in use today include:
* Professional LMR (Land Mobile Radio) and SMR (Specialized Mobile Radio) typically used by business, industrial and Public Safety entities
* Consumer Two Way Radio including FRS (Family Radio Service), GMRS (General Mobile Radio Service)
Wireless communication may be via:
* radio frequency communication,
* microwave communication, for example long-range line-of-sight via highly directional antennas, or short-range communication, or
* infrared (IR) short-range communication, for example from remote controls or via IRDA,
Applications may involve point-to-point communication, point-to-multi point communication, broadcasting , cellular networks and other wireless networks.
Perhaps, to stablish a communication between two or more points taking advantage of air waves.
Never had though! But Wikipedia had made a good work in the explanation and history of this technique. http://www.wikipedia.org