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Ultra-wideband (UWB, ultra wideband, ultra-wide band and ultraband) is a radio technology that can use a very low energy level for short-range, high-bandwidth communications over a large portion of the radio spectrum. The following is a list of devices that support the technology from various UWB silicon providers.
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The Sonos Five (originally branded as the ZonePlayer S5 and later as the Play:5) is a smart speaker developed by Sonos. It was first introduced on October 13, 2009, and released on November 5, 2009, as the debut product in the Sonos Play line.
In order to properly measure a UWB signal with a spectrum analyzer and compare it to the -41.3dBm/MHz, you should use the following settings. If you connect a UWB transmitter directly into a spectrum analyzer (conducted with a cable, no antenna over the air), you should get values in the -43dBm to -40dBm range.
Sonos, Inc. is an American audio equipment manufacturer headquartered in Santa Barbara, California. The company was founded in 2002 by John MacFarlane, Craig Shelburne, Tom Cullen, and Trung Mai. The company was founded in 2002 by John MacFarlane, Craig Shelburne, Tom Cullen, and Trung Mai.
The Sonos One is a smart speaker developed by Sonos, announced on October 4, 2017 and released on October 24. [2] The speaker contains a six-microphone array, allowing use of the virtual assistants, Amazon Alexa and Google Assistant. [3] In 2018, the smart speaker added support for Apple's AirPlay 2. [4]
Enhanced Voice Services (EVS) is a superwideband speech audio coding standard that was developed for VoLTE and VoNR. It offers up to 20 kHz audio bandwidth and has high robustness to delay jitter and packet losses due to its channel aware coding [1] and improved packet loss concealment. [2] It has been developed in 3GPP and is described in 3GPP ...
Often these receivers are built to only support the audio component of AirPlay, much like AirTunes. Bluetooth devices (headsets, speakers) that support the A2DP profile also appear as AirPlay receivers when paired with an iOS device, although Bluetooth is a device-to-device protocol that does not rely on a wireless network access point.