University tests power-saving analog chips
A Georgia Institute of Technology research team received a $3.5 million grant to use miniature, power-saving analog chips to develop portable communications technology capable of scanning a broad range of radio-frequency bands to locate open channels. ...
A Georgia Institute of Technology research team received a $3.5 million grant to use miniature, power-saving analog chips to develop portable communications technology capable of scanning a broad range of radio-frequency bands to locate open channels. The analog spectral processors improve battlefield communications by using less-crowded frequencies, according to the university.
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