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With no more wires to connect, will they be reduced to simply making sure the big-screen TV is mounted correctly on the wall?
It probably won't be quite that simple, but helping solve the problem of wires running to and fro - and how to hide them - is part of what this technology is about.
Though Sony and Samsung want to make WHDI the industry standard - and Motorola, Sharp and Hitachi are on board as well - it's noteworthy that LG, Toshiba, Panasonic and NEC plan to produce sets using a similar wireless system known as SiBeam.
Let's hope that doesn't lead to another technology war, a la Blu-ray versus HD-DVD.
WHDI is developed by Amimon Ltd., an Israeli company. Word is that sets using the system will initially cost about $100 more than non-WHDI sets.
Said Naom Geri, Amimon’s VP for Marketing: “If you have a TV in the home, that TV will be able to access any source in the home, whether it’s a set-top box in the living room, or the Play Station in the bedroom, or a DVD player in another bedroom. That’s the message of WHDI.”
And Geri could have added, freedom from wires.


