Affiliation:
1. Institute Director, The School of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology
2. Chair Professor, The School of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology
Abstract
The Georgia Tech Broadband Institute was created in 1999, as a combination of two evolving organizations --- the Broadband Telecommunications Center (created in 1995) and the Georgia Tech Wireless Institute (created in 1998). The consolidation of the centers was in reflection of the synergy that existed between the centers, and the overlap in terms of existing and potential Industry sponsorship. The 1999 merger recognized that the future of wireless included an overarching trend towards broadband capability, and that from the user or application viewpoint, seamless and broadband connectivity were more significant than the medium used for the connection. In the rest of this summary, we focus on the Wireless component of the Georgia Tech Broadband Institute, the Georgia Tech Wireless Institute for short.
Publisher
Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)
Reference15 articles.
1. Mobility management in next-generation wireless systems
2. A slotted CDMA protocol with BER scheduling for wireless multimedia networks
3. 3
. Barry J.R. Wireless Infrared Communications Boston: Kluwer Academic Publishers 1994. 3. Barry J.R. Wireless Infrared Communications Boston: Kluwer Academic Publishers 1994.
4. Blind multiuser detection using linear prediction
5. 5
. J. Stevenson Kenney (Invited) "Nonlinear Microwave Measurement and Characterization " book chapter in CRC Modern Microwave Handbook J.M. Golio ed. expected publication Dec. 2000. 5. J. Stevenson Kenney (Invited) "Nonlinear Microwave Measurement and Characterization " book chapter in CRC Modern Microwave Handbook J.M. Golio ed. expected publication Dec. 2000.