enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Transceiver - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transceiver

    A decapped integrated circuit of a transceiver used in handheld communication devices and radio equipment as a modem extension. On-die passfilters are visible. In a wired telephone, the handset contains the transmitter (for speaking) and receiver (for listening). Despite being able to transmit and receive data, the whole unit is colloquially ...

  3. Eye pattern - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eye_pattern

    In telecommunications, an eye pattern, also known as an eye diagram, is an oscilloscope display in which a digital signal from a receiver is repetitively sampled and applied to the vertical input (y-axis), while the data rate is used to trigger the horizontal sweep (x-axis). It is so called because, for several types of coding, the pattern ...

  4. Small Form-factor Pluggable - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Small_Form-factor_Pluggable

    The SFP transceiver is not standardized by any official standards body, but rather is specified by a multi-source agreement (MSA) among competing manufacturers. The SFP was designed after the GBIC interface, and allows greater port density (number of transceivers per given area) than the GBIC, which is why SFP is also known as mini-GBIC.

  5. Radio receiver design - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radio_receiver_design

    A schematic of a superhet AM receiver. Note that the radio includes an AGC loop in order to maintain the RF and IF stages in their linear region, and to produce an audio output not dependent on the signal power received. Here we show block diagrams for typical superheterodyne receivers for AM and FM broadcast respectively.

  6. Sensor node - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sensor_node

    Transceiver Sensor nodes often make use of ISM band , which gives free radio , spectrum allocation and global availability. The possible choices of wireless transmission media are radio frequency (RF), optical communication (laser) and infrared .

  7. Cellular network - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cellular_network

    A cellular network or mobile network is a telecommunications network where the link to and from end nodes is wireless and the network is distributed over land areas called cells, each served by at least one fixed-location transceiver (such as a base station).

  8. Coherent optical module - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coherent_optical_module

    Coherent optical module refers to a typically hot-pluggable coherent optical transceiver that uses coherent modulation (BPSK/QPSK/QAM) rather than amplitude modulation (RZ/NRZ/PAM4) and is typically used in high-bandwidth data communications applications.

  9. Physical layer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Physical_layer

    Micrel KS8721CL – 3.3 V single power supply 10/100BASE-TX/FX MII physical layer transceiver. The Ethernet PHY is a component that operates at the physical layer of the OSI network model. It implements the physical layer portion of the Ethernet. Its purpose is to provide analog signal physical access to the link.