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Matter originated in December 2019 as the Project Connected Home over IP (or CHIP for short) working group, founded by Amazon, Apple, Google and the Zigbee Alliance, now called the Connectivity Standards Alliance (CSA). [3] [5] Subsequent members include IKEA, Huawei, and Schneider. [8] [9] Version 1.0 of the specification was published on 4 ...
Thread is an IPv6-based, low-power mesh networking technology for Internet of things (IoT) products. [1] The Thread protocol specification is available at no cost; however, this requires agreement and continued adherence to an end-user license agreement (EULA), which states "Membership in Thread Group is necessary to implement, practice, and ship Thread technology and Thread Group specifications."
The relationship between IEEE 802.15.4 and Zigbee [8] is similar to that between IEEE 802.11 and the Wi-Fi Alliance. The requirements for membership in the Alliance cause problems for free-software developers working with Zigbee because the annual fee conflicts with the GNU General Public Licence. [9]
Zigbee is an IEEE 802.15.4-based specification for a suite of high-level communication protocols used to create personal area networks with small, low-power digital radios, such as for home automation, medical device data collection, and other low-power low-bandwidth needs, designed for small scale projects which need wireless connection.
The Connected Home over IP project group was launched and introduced by Amazon, Apple, Google, [212] Comcast and the Zigbee Alliance on December 18, 2019. [213] The project is backed by big companies and by being based on proven Internet design principles and protocols it aims to unify the currently fragmented systems.
The wire protocol may be either text-based or a binary protocol. Although an important architectural decision, this is a separate matter from the distinction between wire protocols and programmatic APIs. In electronics, a wire protocol is the mechanism used to transmit data from one point to another. [1]
Twist-on wire connectors are not generally recommended for use with aluminum wire in the United States. [1] The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission disapproves wire nuts for aluminum wire; instead, special crimp connectors are called for, and as of 2011 the CPSC asserted qualified, second-preference approval of a certain kind of screw ...
The cable must be capable of transmitting 600 MHz for 1000BASE-T1 and 66 MHz for 100BASE-T1. 2.5 Gb/s, 5 Gb/s, and 10 Gb/s over a 15 m single pair is standardized in 802.3ch-2020. [25] In June 2023, 802.3cy added 25 Gb/s speeds at lengths up to 11 m. [26] Similar to PoE, Power over Data Lines (PoDL) can provide up to 50 W to a device. [27]