ABC: An Introduction to Wireless

Get an overview of the promise and limitations of wireless communications

By Tom Wailgum

CIO

What does "wireless" mean?

Wireless means transmitting signals over invisible radio waves instead of wires. Garage door openers and television remote controls were the first wireless devices to become a part of everyday life. Now the cordless keyboard and mouse, PDAs, and digital and cellular phones are commonplace.

Wireless technologies are used for things as simple as making a phone call or as complex as letting the sales force get information from an ERP application.

Once reserved for only the most mission-critical and esoteric applications, wireless communication has entered the mainstream as vendors refine the throughput, stability, security and affordability of an ever-growing range of supported wireless applications. In the wireless world, your colleagues' whereabouts become totally transparent as you remain persistently connected with one another in real-time – even if some of your colleagues are flying cross-country. The ubiquity of wireless communication is confirmed by the results of a www.cio.com survey of CIOs:

  • 83% of CIOs have enabled wireless access to e-mail
  • 75% of respondents are currently undertaking a wireless project
  • 68% said wireless is either important or somewhat important
  • 16% cited wireless as extremely important to their current business goals
  • Almost 10% of CIOs are starting to pursue data-intensive wireless projects, such as access to CRM and ERP systems

For businesses, wireless technology means new ways to stay in touch with customers, suppliers and employees. The future of wireless lies in faster, more reliable methods of transferring data and, to a lesser extent, increased use of voice commands and audio improvements.

What's the difference between wireless and mobile?

Mobile just means portable. A laptop is a mobile device, as is a PDA or a cell phone. A desktop would be a mobile device if you had the inclination to carry it around with you. A wireless device has some sort of network connectivity. A cell phone is wireless, and a laptop or PDA would be wireless if they had a wireless modem. Similarly, applications are wireless when they connect and exchange data with a network.

Wireless can be divided into these categories:

  • Fixed wireless—the operation of wireless devices or systems in fixed locations, such as homes and offices. A typical example would be equipment connected to the Internet via specialized modems.
  • Mobile wireless—the use of wireless devices or systems aboard motorized, moving vehicles; examples include the automotive cell phone and personal communications services (PCS).
  • Portable wireless—the operation of autonomous, battery-powered wireless devices or systems outside the office, home or vehicle; examples include handheld cell phones and PCS units.
  • IR wireless—the use of devices that convey data via infrared radiation. Example: portable wireless devices that normally derive their power from batteries
Loading...
Mobile MarketSpace
White Papers
The CIO's Guide to Wireless in the Enterprise
This guide provides a basic overview and worksheet of mobile computing for those who are interested in evaluating a wireless enterprise solution. Read This White Paper »
The CIO's Guide to Mobile Applications
A primary strength of a wireless application is to ideally offer users a stable connection, regardless of location and enable users to access their information while on the go. Read This White Paper »
The CIO's Guide to Mobile Security: Executive Overview and Checklist
This document examines six key mobile computing security concerns that an IT department should consider when evaluating a wireless solution. Read This White Paper »
Business Drivers for Mobile Unified Communications
See results from a recent survey to learn the common barriers of implementation and find out how you can implement mobile unified communications without replacing your existing infrastructure. Read this White Paper »
The Business Value of Mobile Social Networks
Learn about the evolving technologies in the social networkign market and how the next generation of location-aware handheld devices will change the way business is conducted. Read this White Paper »
Automating Field Technicians with Smartphones
Find out why a large telecommunications organization chose smartphones over laptops. The result was a cost savings of $1.6 million, improved customer service and more. Read this White Paper »
 
SPONSORED LINKS
 

White Paper: Take your Call Center to the Next Level

Is Your WLAN Helping You Comply with Security Guidelines of the PCI Standard?

White Paper: Improve Employee Efficiency and Reduce Telecom Costs

Dramatically boost network capacity and speed-up to 600 Mbps

Mobility is Growing: Survey Shows Why CIOs are Concerned

Virtualization Benchmark and TCO Analysis-Read Now

White Paper: Scaling Down HPC for Smaller Organizations

White Paper: Never Enough Compute Power?

Microsoft Windows Vista Cost and Benefit Estimator

White Paper: Efficient Desktop Application Management

White Paper: Green Issues for Networking

White Paper: The Roadmap to Data Center Automation

Learn how companies are changing how they reach out to their most profitable customers.

Get help navigating the management challenges of virtualization.

Narrow the gap between virtualization's benefits and the management risks.

Cash in on the promise of virtualization

Complementary BI: The New Approach to Business Intelligence

The ECM Paradox: Extending Local Flexibility to Strengthen Central Control

Customer Insight Yields Sales, Marketing Gains

Efficient by design: Watch this flash demo of the Quad-Core AMD Opteron Processor

HP and Oracle deploy unbreakable computing infrastructure at Replacements, Ltd.

Affordable technology-no compromise. HP server solutions

SOA Educational Library at the TIBCO SOA Resource Center

CIO Viewpoints: Migrating to Exchange 2007

Thrive during global disruption. Cisco video featuring Juan Enriquez

White Paper: Enabling Next Generation IP Communications

White Paper: A Cohesive Network Security Approach

Why Your Firewall, VPN, and IEEE Aren't Enough to Protect Your Network

Webcast - "Into the Wild: Managing Laptops Outside the Office"

Unified Communications & Collaboration: Game-Changing Business Results

Server Virtualization Benchmark Results

Learn to Leverage Maximum Computing Power

Windows Vista: Essential Benefits and Deployment Strategies

Best Practices: Safe and Secure Hardware Asset Recovery

White Paper: Migrating to Windows Vista and Microsoft Office 2007 Together

New IDG Survey Results on Data Center Automation

Operational Excellence Is Key to Maximizing IT Investments

The Right and Wrong Master Data Management Strategies to Start Small and Grow Big

Find out how to manage virtualization's risks and reap the rewards.

Conquer the realities of managing virtualization

Remote Infrastructure Management - What Your Peers are Thinking

Learn what it takes to build a holistic digital collaboration platform

Make Hidden Trends, Inter-Relationships and Influences Visible.

Improve delivery of product information to customers.

Renowned Engineering Institution Chooses AMD Processor-Based Servers

Spend less. Get hosted UC. Get cash back. It's easy under a Cypress

Predict the future with HP Insight Power Manager

Log onto Hitachi True Stories, films inspired by the next great achievement

Earn PROFESSIONAL DOCTORATE Part-Time, Online at Syracuse University's iSchool

Make IT Work As One@novell.com

 
 
RESOURCE CENTER