A deaf football team will debut a 5G-connected augmented reality helmet to call plays::The helmet, developed by AT&T and Gallaudet University, will debut at the school’s Saturday game. When a coach chooses a play on a tablet, it will then display on a small lens on the player’s helmet.

  • @ramble81@lemm.ee
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    349 months ago

    Why did they go with 5G? For the PR for AT&T? Seems like a shorter range less congested wavelength would work better, and potentially lower power too.

    • @SkyeStarfall
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      9 months ago

      A big part of 5G is to support a lot more devices at the same time, making congestion a smaller issue.

      5G, at least the fully developed version, which idk if they have here, supports directional beams, beamforming. That reduces any congestion to basically 0.

      Like, I don’t know the specifications here, but 5G would work fine, or possibly be better, than wi-fi. Wi-fi is designed for lower scales, and doesn’t handle congestion as well, meanwhile mobile networks are designed to support mass amounts of devices simultaneously. 5G was designed with a lot of these future considerations in mind.

      Edit: further, 5G uses a much shorter wavelength, or higher frequency. It can support far more theoretical traffic than wi-fi, and it has lower range to 4G due to higher attenuation, making congestion an even lower concern.

    • @raptir@lemdro.id
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      49 months ago

      Yeah, 2.4GHz WiFi with a decently powerful transmitter would do great in this scenario. You’ll have line of sight so you could likely cover the entire football field with one transmitter.