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wireless
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English Dictionary: wireless by the DICT Development Group
4 results for wireless
From WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006) [wn]:
wireless
adj
  1. having no wires; "a wireless security system" [ant: wired]
n
  1. medium for communication [syn: radio, radiocommunication, wireless]
  2. transmission by radio waves
  3. an electronic receiver that detects and demodulates and amplifies transmitted signals
    Synonym(s): radio receiver, receiving set, radio set, radio, tuner, wireless
  4. a communication system based on broadcasting electromagnetic waves
    Synonym(s): radio, wireless
From Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913) [web1913]:
   Wireless \Wire"less\, n.
      Short for {Wireless telegraphy}, {Wireless telephony}, etc.;
      as, to send a message by wireless.

From Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913) [web1913]:
   Wireless \Wire"less\, a.
      Having no wire; specif. (Elec.), designating, or pertaining
      to, a method of telegraphy, telephony, etc., in which the
      messages, etc., are transmitted through space by electric
      waves; as, a wireless message.
  
      {Wireless} {telegraphy [or] telegraph} (Elec.), any system of
            telegraphy employing no connecting wire or wires between
            the transmitting and receiving stations.
  
      Note: Although more or less successful researchers were made
               on the subject by Joseph Henry, Hertz, Oliver Lodge,
               and others, the first commercially successful system
               was that of Guglielmo Marconi, patented in March, 1897.
               Marconi employed electric waves of high frequency set
               up by an induction coil in an oscillator, these waves
               being launched into space through a lofty antenna. The
               receiving apparatus consisted of another antenna in
               circuit with a coherer and small battery for operating
               through a relay the ordinary telegraphic receiver. This
               apparatus contains the essential features of all the
               systems now in use.
  
      {Wireless telephone}, an apparatus or contrivance for
            wireless telephony.
  
      {Wireless telephony}, telephony without wires, usually
            employing electric waves of high frequency emitted from an
            oscillator or generator, as in wireless telegraphy. A
            telephone transmitter causes fluctuations in these waves,
            it being the fluctuations only which affect the receiver.

From The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing (15Feb98) [foldoc]:
   wireless
  
      A term describing a computer {network} where
      there is no physical connection (either copper cable or {fibre
      optics}) between sender and receiver, but instead they are
      connected by radio.
  
      Applications for wireless networks include multi-party
      {teleconferencing}, distributed work sessions, {personal
      digital assistant}s, and electronic newspapers.   They include
      the transmission of voice, video, {image}s, and data, each
      traffic type with possibly differing {bandwidth} and
      quality-of-service requirements.   The wireless network
      components of a complete source-destination path requires
      consideration of mobility, {hand-off}, and varying
      transmission and {bandwidth} conditions.   The wired/wireless
      network combination provides a severe bandwidth mismatch, as
      well as vastly different error conditions.   The processing
      capability of fixed vs. mobile terminals may be expected to
      differ significantly.   This then leads to such issues to be
      addressed in this environment as {admission control},
      {capacity assignment} and {hand-off} control in the wireless
      domain, flow and error control over the complete end-to-end
      path, dynamic bandwidth control to accommodate bandwidth
      mismatch and/or varying processing capability.
  
      {Usenet} newsgroup {news:comp.std.wireless}.
  
      (1995-02-27)
  
  
No guarantee of accuracy or completeness!
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