Shown at IFA 2010, this TV really works wirelessly. Its manufacturer, China's Haier, WHDMI uses radio transmission for the signal and, for the first time, the energy transmission distance WiTricity developed at MIT.
Single screen placed anywhere in the room without any wires to connect or to an antenna or an electrical outlet: it is the prototype of Haier, already exhibited at CES in Las Vegas earlier this year. This wireless TV manufacturer in China has been presented for the first time in Europe at IFA 2010 in Berlin.
The camera uses a technology transfer of electrical energy developed by researchers from MIT (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) called WiTricity (wireless electricity), already presented in Futura-Sciences.
The video signal is transmitted wirelessly to your TV via a link WHDMI, 5 GHz, a standard being standardized to be compatible with different formats of HDTV. The remote power is provided by a magnetic field generator, WiTricity, presented in late 2006 by Andre Kurs, Robert Moffatt and Soljačić Marino and colleagues at MIT. © Haier
Price unknown
The idea is to create a magnetic field between a transmitter connected to the domestic sector, and a receiver connected to the TV. According to the manufacturer, this set emits no radiation and is consistent with international standards FCC and IEEE.
For the video signal, the TV uses the new standard WHDMI (Wireless Home Digital Interface). It defines a mode of radio transmission for HDTV (1080p and 720p), around 5 GHz. "With the highest video standard available on the market, the distance signal transfer may exceed 30 meters, even through walls or other obstacles with a delay of only a millisecond, Haier had explained at the first presentation Official Product.
Haier will market its wireless TV in 2011, probably later this year. No price has yet been mentioned.
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