What is Li-Fi? How does Li-Fi work? Wi-Fi vs Li-Fi vs Wi-Fi HaLow: Li-Fi for iPhone: The ultimate definition of Li-Fi ~ hehe so hey man,if this shit works ? you could send this shit OUT INTO SPACE !!! (& if "they" are slowly "releasing" this "stuff" OUT of the black,Black,BLACK World ..u know "they" already 'got' IT ) folks "our" World is GONNA change,Change,CHANGE & me's doesn't 'think' it's THAT far ........off Oops
Li-Fi claims to be 100 times faster than standard Wi-Fi. But what exactly is it and how does it work?
Light Fidelity or Li-Fi is a Visible Light Communications (VLC) system running wireless communications travelling at very high speeds.
Li-Fi uses common household LED (light emitting diodes)
lightbulbs to enable data transfer, boasting speeds of up to 224
gigabits per second.
The term Li-Fi was coined by University of Edinburgh
Professor Harald Haas during a TED Talk in 2011. Haas envisioned light
bulbs that could act as wireless routers.
Subsequently, in 2012 after four years of research, Haas set
up company pureLiFi with the aim 'to be the world leader in Visible
Light Communications technology'.
(See also: Eight brilliant uses of Li-Fi)
How it works
Li-Fi and Wi-Fi are quite similar as both transmit data
electromagnetically. However, Wi-Fi uses radio waves while Li-Fi runs on
visible light.
As we now know, Li-Fi is a Visible Light Communications
(VLC) system. This means that it accommodates a photo-detector to
receive light signals and a signal processing element to convert the
data into 'stream-able' content.
An LED lightbulb is a semi-conductor light source meaning
that the constant current of electricity supplied to an LED light bulb
can be dipped and dimmed, up and down at extremely high speeds, without
being visible to the human eye.
For example, data is fed into an LED light bulb (with signal
processing technology), it then sends data (embedded in its beam) at
rapid speeds to the photo-detector (photodiode).
The tiny changes in the rapid dimming of LED bulbs is then converted by the 'receiver' into electrical signal.
The signal is then converted back into a binary data stream
that we would recognise as web, video and audio applications that run on
internet enables devices. [You might also like: What is microservices?]
No comments:
Post a Comment