InnoPhase’s Low-Power Wi-Fi Transceiver Puts Battery-Powered Devices at the Edge of the IoT
The term “low power” is very subjective and depends on a host of factors. For example, a low-power medical device like a pacemaker may run for 10 years without needing a battery replacement. But a low-power rack-mounted system may be pulling in hundreds of watts, but it’s still “low power” relative to what competitive products offer.
That said, the “low-power” Talaria Two platform, developed by InnoPhase, clearly meets the criteria compared to competitive devices. Aimed at the battery-powered IoT sector, this single-chip Wi-Fi radio contains a full-functional multiprotocol transceiver, a MAC/PHY, a digital power amplifier, and an embedded ARM processor with enough headroom for lightweight applications.