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ATSC 3.0 upgrades our existing antenna TV system by establishing a new technical framework for how those TV signals are created, broadcast, and received.
Home Entertainment. Free antenna TV is getting an upgrade and it might be in your town already. 4K, HDR, 120Hz refresh rates and better indoor reception are coming to US airwaves for free thanks...
Antennas in the era of 6G will enable ubiquitous distributed MIMO that unlocks extreme performance, joint communication and sensing that intuitively maps our surrounding, and three-dimensional connectivity that seamlessly merges ground, air and satellite coverage.
ATSC 3.0 is a new broadcast standard designed to deliver 4K HDR for free to an antenna in your home. But the rollout has been slow, and most TVs still can’t get it.
A new programmable antenna could pave the way for a new generation of 6G devices, smart city-type applications and 3D holograms, scientists claim.
NextGen TV, also known as ATSC 3.0 or NextGenTV, is the latest version of over-the-air antenna TV. This groundbreaking standard redefines the way we experience broadcast television. NextGen TV features many enhancements and innovations that go beyond the capabilities of previous digital televisions.
Since one base station can accommodate many directional antennas, it means that 5G can support over 1,000 more devices per meter than what 4G can accommodate. This means that 5G networks can beam ultrafast data to a lot more users, with high precision and little latency.
The innovations of 5th generation mobile network (5G) are rapidly changing wireless technology from network architecture to unit design (such as antenna technologies) because of the new and ambitious technical and application vision.
Princeton researchers have developed a new type of phased array antenna based on large-area electronics technology, which could enable many uses of emerging 5G and 6G wireless networks. The researchers tested the system on the roof of Princeton’s Andlinger Center for Energy and the Environment.
The beam-steering antenna technology has been developed to increase the efficiency of fixed base station antenna at 5G (mmWave) and 6G, and can also be adapted for vehicle-to-vehicle, vehicle-to-infrastructure, vehicular radar, and satellite communications.