Philips Wireless HDTV Link Available Stateside

Philips has finally launched its Wireless HDTV Link in the US market. It is basically a wireless HDMI transmitter/receiver kit that comes with two HDMI and two component video inputs. The device allows you to replace all of your HD cables for set-top boxes, HD satellite receiver, Blu-ray player and gaming console with a single box that controls all of them through a wireless connection. The Philips Wireless HDTV Link is currently available for a manufacturer’s suggested retail price of $799. V

Video/Pictures: The Sony 52″ XBR10 Wireless LCD HDTV With MBT-WZ5 Receiver

Sony has finally come to the market with a streaming 1080P solution for its television line, only found in the XBR10 Bravia, courtesy of the included MBT-WZ5 wireless HDTV reciever. Here is a video we shot this morning of both in action. The TV is stunning and I was most certainly impressed with it – 1080P wireless is crystal clear without hiccups. You cannot tell the difference between wireless and wired with this product. Plus, the wireless transmitter/receiver has enough I/O to satisfy just a

Philips Wireless HDTV Link

Philips introduces the Wireless HDTV Link, which is basically a wireless HDMI transmitter/receiver kit that does digital wireless transmission of 1080p/30 signal with a range of up to 20 meters. Thanks to the device, you no longer need to put your HDTV next to the settop box or AV device but anywhere you like, within the range. The transmitter has two HDMI and two component video inputs which means you can connect to up to four sources. The Philips Wireless HDTV Link is priced at Euro 599.99

Next-Gen iPhone to have FM transmitter/receiver

According to AI , the soon-to-be-released iPhone 3.0 and 3rd-Generation iPod touch will support for a new chip enabling low power 802.11n, including the ability to find and join 5GHz networks. The version of the existing Broadcom chip that supplies WiFi and Bluetooth on existing models jumps from BCM4325 model to BCM4329 model. Existing iPhone and iPod touch models only support 5GHz 802.11a networks, or 2.4GHz 802.11b/g networks, forcing users who want the top speed of 802.11n (a