Jul. 30—ALBANY — Albany Technical College is planning a new degree, Wireless Engineering Technology, addressing the current and future needs of the wireless industry. This program will start in fall ...
The IEEE Communications Society (IEEE ComSoc), the leading worldwide professional organization dedicated to the advancement of communications technologies, has announced the availability of the 2009 ...
Wireless signals are an integral part of many of today's embedded system designs. Mobile computer providers talk of media convergence, where consumers will be able to browse the Internet or watch live ...
WLAN engineers will need to brush up on their soft skills, expand their horizons to include cloud-based management services, and focus on innovation and creativity in leading companies on the path to ...
1. Part of the NYU Wireless team (l-r): Ph.D. student Hangsong Yan, Ph.D. student George R. MacCartney Jr., Professor Theodore S. Rappaport, Ph.D. student Shu Sun ...
The IEEE Communications Society has launched a new program to certify the competency, practical knowledge, and skills of wireless communications professionals. The IEEE Wireless Communication ...
PALO ALTO, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Air Wireless™, global provider of an industry leading wireless DOCSIS technology empowering cable, broadband and wireless service providers, announced today the ...
WASHINGTON If you re an engineer with a background in wireless technology and an interest in shaping policy, here s a job opening that may be of interest. The Federal Communications Commission is ...
NEW YORK, Dec. 15, 2011 /PRNewswire/ -- New York University and the Polytechnic Institute of New York University (NYU-Poly) announced today they have appointed Theodore (Ted) Rappaport, 51, to lead a ...
The increasing popularity of 802.11 wireless-local-area-network (WLAN) technology helps to prove that wireless is the wave of the future. Consumers want to be free from the confines of wires and ...
Never ask a wireless engineer working on the NYC subway system “What can go wrong?” Flooding, ice, brake dust, and power outages relentlessly attack the network components. Rats — many, many rats — ...