SHORT LONG RANGE WIRELESS

Brand Owner (click to sort) Address Description
BLUELAN Wireless Networks Inc Suite 300 3016 - 5 Avenue NE Calgary T2A 6K4 short and long range wireless devices, namely, local area network access points that allow suitably enabled personal computers, lap top computers, cellular phones and hand-held computer devices (personal digital assistants) to connect to each other and exchange data without a need for cabling the devices together;BLUE LAND;
BLUELINK Wireless Networks Inc. Suite 300, 3016 - 5 Avenue N.E. Calgary, Alberta T2A 6K4 Canada short and long range wireless devices, namely, local area network access adaptors that allow suitably enabled personal computers and laptop computers to connect to each other and to suitably enabled modems, telephones, printers, scanners and hand-held computer devices (personal digital assistants) and exchange data without a need for cabling the devices together;BLUE LINK;
 

Where the owner name is not linked, that owner no longer owns the brand

   
Technical Examples
  1. A method and system for testing a plurality of RFID devices disposed on a common carrier. In one embodiment, the RFID devices are evenly spaced along the length of the carrier, and the system comprises a short-range tester, a long-range tester and a computer, the short-range tester being coupled to the computer and having a short-range testing position, the long-range tester being coupled to the computer and having a long-range testing position, the long-range testing position being spaced downstream from the short-range testing position by a known number of device positions. In use, an RFID device of interest is first positioned at the short-range testing position, and the short-range tester reads a unique identifier for that RFID device and communicates the identifier to the computer. The carrier is then advanced so that subsequent RFID devices are read by the short-range tester. When the RFID device of interest has advanced to the long-range testing position, the long-range tester conducts a performance test and communicates any detected results to the computer. Because the distance between the two testing positions is known, the computer knows when the RFID device of interest is at the long-range testing position and uses the identifier to distinguish the results for that device from the results of any other devices.