[bhunting] lives right up against the Rockies, and for a while he’s wanted to measure the temperature variations against the inside of his house against the temperature swings outside. The sensible ...
Emanate Wireless, a vendor of systems that continuously monitor key clinical assets at healthcare facilities, introduced at HIMSS17 two new temperature sensors for its PowerPath Temp Solution. Emanate ...
Banner Engineering introduces its wireless vibration and temperature sensor. Designed to effectively monitor machines for increases in vibration and temperature, the sensor measures RMS velocity in ...
Designed to provide instantaneous high resolution/accuracy measurements for embedded real-time in-line wireless applications, the TFSS433D surface-acoustic-wave temperature sensor integrates easily ...
One of the problems for the smart buildings of tomorrow is that they may depend on some very un-smart wires to power them. To cut the cord, Eindhoven University of Technology (TU/e) researcher Hao Gao ...
Vernier has introduced Go Wireless Temp, a wireless sensor that records temperature data when connected to an iOS device. The instrument enables to users to study temperature in the environment as ...
LONDON — A start-up based in Cambridge, England, focusing on healthcare technologies, has started user trials of a wireless temperature sensor that can measure body temperature to within a thousandth ...
SenGenuity, the sensors division of Vectron International, announced that its TempTrackr wireless temperature measurement system kit now can read six independent passive, wireless temperature sensors.
Researchers at Eindhoven University of Technology (TU/e) have developed a wireless temperature sensor that measures 2mm2 and weights 1.6mg and is powered from the radio waves that are part of the ...
The SL13A and SL900A sensor-enabled RFID tags, developed by ams AG, extend wireless data logging to applications that require temperature, physiological, and ...
The WiFi Edition temperature sensor is a device that monitors ambient temperature in the room and gives an alert via e-mail when the temperature rises or falls outside of the space’s acceptable range.
This minuscule chip can measure the temperature wherever it’s placed—and it never needs a battery, because it’s powered by the radio waves from the same wireless network that it uses to communicate.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results