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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. [1] [2]
Digital keys that operate over NFC and/or UWB are compatible with a variety of mobile wallets.These digital keys can be stored in smart devices through the use of mobile wallets that have access to the device's embedded secure element, such as Google Wallet for Android & Wear OS, Samsung Wallet for Android, Huawei Wallet for HarmonyOS, or Apple Wallet for iOS & watchOS.
In November 2020, Android Open Source Project received first patches related to an upcoming UWB API; "feature-complete" UWB support (exclusively for the sole use case of ranging between supported devices) was released in version 13 of Android. [19]
For Android: Only for supported devices purchased in Japan. For Wear OS: Only for Suica on Pixel Watches, Galaxy Watch6 or later, and Galaxy Watch Ultra devices purchased in Japan. [55] [50] For Fitbit OS: Suica cards can be stored through Fitbit Wallet instead (Fitbit account region must be set to Japan.) Store FeliCa e-money cards For Android:
Due to the U.S. recession and financial difficulties for the UWB developing companies, there was less pressure on the E.U. to exactly define how silicon should implement DAA and companies have not fully implemented DAA. Therefore, devices with global regulatory certification usually use BG3 and BG6 since those bands do not have a DAA requirement.
The biggest one: The Link doesn't work with Android devices. When the product was first released, Eufy did seem to have Android support in the works, but now the product page clearly notes that ...
Some of these technologies include standards such as ANT UWB, Bluetooth, Zigbee, and Wireless USB. Wireless Sensor Networks (WSN / WSAN) are, generically, networks of low-power, low-cost devices that interconnect wirelessly to collect, exchange, and sometimes act-on data collected from their physical environments - "sensor networks". Nodes ...
An additional application layer is designed to discover UWB devices and services and configure them in an interoperable manner . Furthermore, FiRa plans to develop service-specific protocols for multiple verticals that leverage access control, location-based services, and device-to-device services.