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Wireless Innovation Forum : ウィキペディア英語版
Wireless Innovation Forum

The Wireless Innovation Forum (WInnF) is a non-profit "mutual benefit corporation" dedicated to technology innovation in commercial, civil, and defense communications around the world. Forum members bring experience in Software Defined Radio (SDR), Cognitive Radio (CR) and Dynamic Spectrum Access (DSA) technologies in diverse markets and at all levels of the wireless value chain to address emerging wireless communications requirements. The Forum acts as a venue for its members to collaborate to achieve these objectives.
==History==
The Wireless Innovation Forum was founded in 1996 originally as the "The Modular Multifunction Information Transfer System (MMITS) Forum". The organization was created at the request of the US Military Services (led by US Air Force) as an industry association focused on advancing the development of software radio. In 1996 the Forum formed the Mobile Working Group to develop software specifications and standards supporting ground mobile radios.
The Forum published its first Technical Report in 1997 outlining the current state of the art in software defined radio. This document included a reference application framework for software defined radios, referred to as the Software Radio Architecture (SRA), that was developed based on the existing SPEAKeasy Architecture. The late 1990s also saw the initial meeting between the Forum and what would later become the JTRS Joint Program Office (JPO).
In 1998 the MMITS Forum changed its legal name to The Software Defined Radio Forum Inc. and began doing business as The SDR Forum with a broader focus on commercial and international participation. The Forum created three new internal groups — Markets and Regulatory Committees and the Base Station Work Group. Also, the Forum published a revised Technical Report.
In 2001, the Forum contracted with Communications Research Centre Canada (CRC) to provide an SCA Reference Implementation (SCARI-Open). The Forum also made filings with the United States Federal Communications Commission (FCC) that helped form the FCC's public rule making on SDR.
In 2002, the Forum hosted its first Technical Conference and Product Exposition, which has become an annual event with the presentation of technical papers along with tutorials, workshops and demonstrations.〔; 〕
In 2004 and 2005, the Forum reorganized to support its members in exploring technologies that extend beyond SDR. A key part of this reorganization was the formation of the Cognitive Radio Work Group, which worked to support IEEE P1900.1 in defining standard definitions for Software Defined and Cognitive Radio and to establish a reference architecture for a cognitive radio system.〔; 〕
Between 2004 and 2010 the Forum signed memorandums of understanding with multiple international groups to allow collaboration in areas of mutual interest. These groups included the European End to End Efficiency (E3) Program, IEICE in Japan, IEEK in Korea, IEEE Standards Association, JTRS and the European Science Foundation.〔; 〕 In 2007, the Forum initiated the Smart Radio Challenge, a worldwide competition in which student engineering teams design, develop and test SDR or cognitive radio technologies that address relevant problems in the advanced wireless market.
In late 2009 the SDR Forum was renamed the Wireless Innovation Forum, reflecting the fact that many of the projects undertaken by its members had moved beyond SDR to include Cognitive Radio, Systems of Systems, Ad Hoc Networks, and Dynamic Spectrum Access Technologies. The Forum secured representation in China in 2008 and opened an office in Brussels in 2010 to provide better support for its European members.〔; 〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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