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  2. Municipal wireless network - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Municipal_wireless_network

    A municipal wireless network is a citywide wireless network. This usually works by providing municipal broadband via Wi-Fi to large parts or all of a municipal area by deploying a wireless mesh network. The typical deployment design uses hundreds of wireless access points deployed outdoors, often on poles.

  3. Municipal broadband - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Municipal_broadband

    Wireless public municipal broadband networks avoid unreliable hub and spoke distribution models and use mesh networking instead. [4] This method involves relaying radio signals throughout the whole city via a series of access points or radio transmitters, each of which is connected to at least two other transmitters.

  4. List of sensors - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_sensors

    Wheel speed sensor; Airbag sensors; Automatic transmission speed sensor; Brake fluid pressure sensor; ... Wireless sensor network; Through-beam edge sensor; Speed sensor

  5. Vehicle tracking system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vehicle_tracking_system

    "Passive" devices store GPS location, speed, heading and sometimes a trigger event such as key on/off, door open/closed. Once the vehicle returns to a predetermined point, the device is removed and the data downloaded to a computer for evaluation. Passive systems include auto download type that transfer data via wireless download.

  6. Why General Motors Wants Wi-Fi in Your Car - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/2013-11-19-why-general-motors...

    The Chevy Sonic was the first car to have Apple's famous virtual assistant, Siri, incorporated into its on-board systems. Photo credit: General Motors. More and more, high-tech features are an ...

  7. Connected car - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Connected_car

    A connected car is a car that can communicate bidirectionally with other systems outside of the car. [1] [2] This connectivity can be used to provide services to passengers (such as music, identification of local businesses, and navigation) or to support or enhance self-driving functionality (such as coordination with other cars, receiving software updates, or integration into a ride hailing ...

  8. ANT (network) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ANT_(network)

    ANT was designed for low-bit-rate and low-power sensor networks, in a manner conceptually similar to (but not compatible with) Bluetooth Low Energy. [3] This is in contrast with normal Bluetooth, which was designed for relatively high-bit-rate applications such as streaming sound for low-power headsets.

  9. Vehicular communication systems - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vehicular_communication...

    Currently, cellular based on 3GPP-Release 16 [19] and WiFi based on IEEE 802.11p have proven to be potential communication technologies enabling connected vehicles. However, this does not negate that other technologies for example, VLC , ZigBee , WiMAX , microwave , mmWave are still a vehicular communication research area.