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[Editorial]
The Propagation Of RF Technology
The more that RF propagates, the healthier this industry will become.

Jack Browne  |  ED Online ID #6865 |  November 2003

Once upon a time, researchers discovered that radio waves could be used for more than just radios. As radar technology blossomed during World War II, an industry took root, growing steadily on a diet of largely military applications, such as electronic warfare (EW), signal intelligence (SIGINT), and electronic countermeasures (ECM). Some 50 years later, the industry finally found itself with real commercial business as wireless markets crystallized in the late 1980s.

That was then, and this is now. The cellular "sleigh ride" that the industry enjoyed for the past decade has braked to an abrupt halt for many, although military business again looks appealing. But aren't there more uses for RF technology than cellular communications and military systems?

In fact, RF/wireless technologies have been in use for many years in industrial and medical environments, and will play increasingly important roles in automotive engineering. In industrial applications, low-power, low-data-rate transmitters and receivers have supported sensors in process-control and inventory applications for decades. In medical environments, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) may be the most noteworthy RF application, but such uses as wireless hospitals, telemetry, and implantable monitors are quickly gaining ground.

In recognizing the long-term need for this industry to rely more on just commercial and military avenues, next year Microwaves & RF will expand its coverage into areas that may be nontraditional, but represent opportunities for RF/microwave technology (see Editorial Calendar).


ISSUETHEME
JanuaryTest & Measurement
FebruarySemiconductors
MarchCommunications
AprilWireless Technology
MayMTT-S Preview/Radar & Antennas
JuneDefense Electronics
JulyAmplifiers & Oscillators
AugustWireless Applications
SeptemberMilitary Electronics
OctoberEmerging Technologies
NovemberComputer-Aided Engineering
DecemberCommunications


Certainly, if you are working in some of these growing application areas, such as automotive (telematics), industrial, or medical designs, we'd like to hear how we could help you with your design problems. In more ways than one, the more that RF propagates, the healthier this industry will become.





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Reader Comments

Detailed Information not accessible.

Cristopher -February 26, 2008

Detailed Information not accessible.

Cristopher -February 26, 2008

Need to know if there is any digitizers or inputs to autocad from any RF transmiters, to be able to plot a roof area or layout of a building out of rf transmiters

Alvaro G Collazos -February 28, 2006

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