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"Grow, Bob" <bob.grow@intel.com> Sent by:
11/24/2003 16:09
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To: "Paul Nikolich" <p.nikolich@ieee.org> "IEEE802" <stds-802-sec@ieee.org> cc: <k.mccabe@ieee.org> (bcc: Stuart Kerry/SVL/SC/PHILIPS) Subject: RE: [802SEC] +++EC Motion+++ Motion to approve a Press Release for the 802.11g Award for Technical Excellence Classification:
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I am very pleased to announce that the IEEE 802.11 Working Group and the Wi-Fi Alliance have jointly been awarded the PC Magazine 2003 award for Technical Excellence in the Protocol section for the 802.11gTM amendment, on Monday night at the Venetian Hotel, Las Vegas, NV ceremony. Stuart J. Kerry (IEEE 802.11 Chair) and Frank Hanzlik (Managing Director of Wi-Fi Alliance) were present to accept the award on behalf of our members. The other two finalist in our category were Serial ATA and WS-I Basic Profile.
We were in very good company during this ceremony, as other awards were presented for "Person of the Year" - Carly Fiorina (HP) and "Lifetime Achievement" - Scott Cook (Intuit) amongst others.
Protocols
Winner: IEEE 802.11 Working Group and the Wi-Fi Alliance
"The IEEE's 802.11g standard defines the way wireless LAN gear communicates at up to 54 megabits per second while remaining backward-compatible with 11-Mbps 802.11b. This important breakthrough enables streaming media, video downloads, and a greater concentration of users without interference. In addition to technical hurdles, the standards group had to overcome commercial rivalries and FCC rule changes to enact the standard."
+++++++++
Press Release for EC Motion approval, that has been worked on by IEEE, Paul Nikolich, and myself. We believe that this event merits a press release, and therefore present the text of the Draft release below:
DRAFT PRESS RELEASE
Contact: Stuart J. Kerry, IEEE 802.11 Working Group Chair
+1 408 991 4854, stuart.kerry@philips.com
or
Karen McCabe, IEEE Senior Marketing Manager
+1 732-562-3824, k.mccabe@ieee.org
HIGHER-SPEED IEEE WIRELESS LAN PROTOCOL WINS
PC MAGAZINE AWARD FOR TECHNOLOGY EXCELLENCE
PISCATAWAY, N.J., USA, __ Nov. 2003 – The IEEE 802.11g™ standard for higher-speed wireless transmission in local area networks (LANs) has won the Protocol Category in PC Magazine's 20th Annual Awards for Technical Excellence competition. This standard was selected over two other finalists in the same category: Serial ATA for storage devices and WS-I Basic Profile for interoperable web services.
PC Magazine chose IEEE's 802.11g because it "defines the way wireless LAN gear communicates at up to 54 megabits per second while remaining backward-compatible with 11-Mbps 802.11b™. This important breakthrough enables streaming media, video downloads, and a greater concentration of users without interference."
Stuart J. Kerry, Chair of the IEEE 802.11™ Working Group for Wireless LANs, who accepted the award for the IEEE at a ceremony at the Comdex trade show in Las Vegas, said: "This award is all the more important to me because I know how technically astute the editors of PC Magazine are. It's also significant that this is the second time an 802.11 standard has won this prestigious award. We received the first one for IEEE 802.11b-1999."
PC Magazine's annual technical excellence awards recognize "the products and technologies that moved the state of the art forward, those that broke new ground." Winners of the current awards were selected by the magazine's editorial and laboratory staff from products and protocols that became available between September 2002 and September 2003.
"This award provides additional recognition of the IEEE 802.11 working group as the preeminent wireless LAN standards development organization," said Paul Nikolich, Chair of the IEEE 802 LAN/MAN Standards Committee. The IEEE 802.11 working group is part of this committee.
The IEEE 802.11g amendment, which raised the data rate of IEEE 802.11b networks to 54 Mbps from 11 Mbps, was released in June 2003. The Wi-Fi Alliance then created an interoperability certification testing program for products based on the standard. These products have proven highly successful in the global wireless LAN market.
The transmission speed added by IEEE 802.11g gives wireless networks the ability to serve up to four to five times more users than they could with IEEE 802.11b. This has opened possibilities for the use of IEEE 802.11 networks in more demanding applications, such as wireless multimedia video transmission and broadcast MPEG.
IEEE 802.11g units are able to fall back to speeds of 11 Mbps, so IEEE 802.11b and IEEE 802.11g devices can coexist in the same network. Both standards apply to the 2.4 GHz frequency band.
IEEE 802.11 standards form a family of specifications that define how WLAN equipment should be produced so equipment from different manufacturers can work together. IEEE 802.11g, "Higher Speed Physical Layer (PHY) Extension to IEEE 802.11b," was developed by the IEEE 802.11 Working Group, which is sponsored by the IEEE 802 LAN/MAN Standards Committee of the IEEE Computer Society. For further information, visit: http://www.ieee802.org/.
About the IEEE Standards Association
The IEEE Standards Association, a globally recognized standards-setting body, develops consensus standards through an open process that brings diverse parts of an industry together. These standards set specifications and procedures based on current scientific consensus. The IEEE-SA has a portfolio of more than 870 completed standards and more than 400 standards in development. Over 15,000 IEEE members worldwide belong to IEEE-SA and voluntarily participate in standards activities. For further information on IEEE-SA see: http://www.standards.ieee.org/.
About the IEEE
The IEEE has more than 375,000 members in approximately 150 countries. Through its members, the organization is a leading authority on areas ranging from aerospace, computers and telecommunications to biomedicine, electric power and consumer electronics. The IEEE produces nearly 30 percent of the world's literature in the electrical and electronics engineering, computing and control technology fields. This nonprofit organization also sponsors or cosponsors more than 300 technical conferences each year. Additional information about the IEEE can be found at http://www.ieee.org.
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/ Stuart
_______________________________
Stuart J. Kerry
Chair, IEEE 802.11 WLANs WG
Philips Semiconductors, Inc.
1109 McKay Drive, M/S 48A SJ,
San Jose, CA 95131-1706,
United States of America.
Ph : +1 (408) 474-7356
Fax: +1 (408) 474-7247
Cell: +1 (408) 348-3171
eMail: stuart.kerry@philips.com
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