Li-Fi 100 Times Faster Than WiFi
Science
Friction method is now used by Harald Haas from the University of
Edinburgh, developed Li-Fi which can transmit data with the speed of
1GBPS. The technology of LED light bulbs from the startup company from
Estonia.
After
dedicated hard work on research from years seems like just Si-Fi stuff,
now it seems to be a complete state of the stuff we call it Li-Fi,
Li-Fi will be 100 times faster than Wi-Fi network, Li-Fi generally
developed to transfer data through LED light bulbs and it have said
approximately it will cross 1GBPS of data transfer rate as download or
upload.
Li-Fi has been developed by a startup
company, they have their own experimental lab from which they have
displayed the demonstration of the new technology Li-Fi, now we can also
say that we are in Future. The new technology is also coming under
wireless communication system which transmit data through LED light
bulbs and it doesn’t use any traditional radio frequency.
Li-Fi 100 Times Faster Than WiFi Upto 1GBPS
India-based startup company Velmenni
from 2014 starting their research and development in Jugnu as smart LED
bulbs now the work almost completed but still work in progress, it is
said that the product they are developing is able to transfer the data
only through visible lights, this types of system technology allows LED
bulbs to transmit data to another bulbs we also it can be smartphone,
internet connectivity. The company working with Android hardware to work
with its product dubbed Jugnu.
Deepak Solanki, CEO of Velmenni told
IBTimes UK, “Currently we are working with a pilot projects with some of
the technological industries so that we can utilize the technology
Visible Light Communication (VLC). The technology we have developed will
be working for industrial as well as personal private purpose in which
the data transfer with just a light and soon working it will work with
Android smartphone (We are working in Android), at the time of our pilot
project with other private clients, we are also setting up a Li-Fi
network in every sector of office for the use and feedback.”
Li-Fi developed by Harald Haas from the
University of Edinburgh said: “All we would need to do is to fit a
little microchip to every potential brightening gadget. What’s more,
this would then consolidate two essential functionalities: light and
remote information transmission,” he told the crowd.
Further, he included: “And it’s this advantageous interaction that I for
one accept could take care of the four fundamental issues that face us
in remote correspondence nowadays. Also, later on, you would not just
have 14 billion lights, you may have 14 billion Li-Fis conveyed
worldwide for a cleaner, a greener, and even a brighter future.”
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