Wireless data from every light bulb | Harald Haas

806,912 views ・ 2011-08-02

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:15
Do you know
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that we have 1.4 million cellular radio masts
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deployed worldwide?
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And these are base stations.
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And we also have
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more than five billion
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of these devices here.
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These are cellular mobile phones.
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And with these mobile phones,
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we transmit more than 600 terabytes of data
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every month.
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This is a 6 with 14 zeroes --
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a very large number.
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And wireless communications
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has become a utility
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like electricity and water.
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We use it everyday. We use it in our everyday lives now --
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in our private lives, in our business lives.
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And we even have to be asked sometimes, very kindly,
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to switch off the mobile phone at events like this
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for good reasons.
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And it's this importance
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why I decided to look into the issues
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that this technology has,
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because it's so fundamental to our lives.
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And one of the issues is capacity.
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The way we transmit wireless data is by using electromagnetic waves --
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in particular, radio waves.
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And radio waves are limited.
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They are scarce; they are expensive;
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and we only have a certain range of it.
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And it's this limitation
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that doesn't cope
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with the demand of wireless data transmissions
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and the number of bytes and data which are transmitted every month.
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And we are simply running out of spectrum.
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There's another problem.
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That is efficiency.
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These 1.4 million cellular radio masts, or base stations,
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consume a lot of energy.
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And mind you, most of the energy
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is not used to transmit the radio waves,
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it is used to cool the base stations.
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Then the efficiency of such a base station
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is only at about five percent.
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And that creates a big problem.
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Then there's another issue that you're all aware of.
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You have to switch off your mobile phone
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during flights.
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In hospitals, they are security issues.
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And security is another issue.
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These radio waves penetrate through walls.
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They can be intercepted,
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and somebody can make use of your network
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if he has bad intentions.
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So these are the main four issues.
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But on the other hand,
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we have 14 billion of these:
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light bulbs, light.
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And light is part of the electromagnetic spectrum.
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So let's look at this in the context
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of the entire electromagnetic spectrum, where we have gamma rays.
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You don't want to get close to gamma rays, it could be dangerous.
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X-rays, useful when you go to hospitals.
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Then there's ultraviolet light.
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it's good for a nice suntan,
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but otherwise dangerous for the human body.
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Infrared --
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due to eye safety regulations,
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can be only used with low power.
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And then we have the radio waves, they have the issues I've just mentioned.
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And in the middle there, we have this visible light spectrum.
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It's light,
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and light has been around for many millions of years.
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And in fact, it has created us,
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has created life,
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has created all the stuff of life.
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So it's inherently safe to use.
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And wouldn't it be great to use that for wireless communications?
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Not only that, I compared [it to] the entire spectrum.
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I compared the radio waves spectrum --
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the size of it --
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with the size of the visible light spectrum.
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And guess what?
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We have 10,000 times more of that spectrum,
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which is there for us to use.
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So not only do we have this huge amount of spectrum,
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let's compare that with a number I've just mentioned.
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We have 1.4 million
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expensively deployed,
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inefficient radio cellular base stations.
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And multiply that by 10,000,
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then you end up at 14 billion.
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14 billion is the number of light bulbs installed already.
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So we have the infrastructure there.
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Look at the ceiling, you see all these light bulbs.
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Go to the main floor, you see these light bulbs.
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Can we use them for communications?
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Yes.
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What do we need to do?
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The one thing we need to do
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is we have to replace these inefficient incandescent light bulbs,
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florescent lights,
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with this new technology of LED,
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LED light bulbs.
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An LED is a semiconductor. It's an electronic device.
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And it has a very nice acute property.
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Its intensity can be modulated
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at very high speeds,
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and it can be switched off at very high speeds.
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And this is a fundamental basic property
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that we exploit
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with our technology.
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So let's show how we do that.
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Let's go to the closest neighbor to the visible light spectrum --
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go to remote controls.
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You all know remote controls have an infrared LED --
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basically you switch on the LED, and if it's off, you switch it off.
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And it creates a simple, low-speed data stream
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in 10,000 bits per second,
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20,000 bits per second.
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Not usable for a YouTube video.
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What we have done
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is we have developed a technology
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with which we can furthermore
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replace the remote control of our light bulb.
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We transmit with our technology,
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not only a single data stream,
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we transmit thousands of data streams
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in parallel,
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at even higher speeds.
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And the technology we have developed --
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it's called SIM OFDM.
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And it's spacial modulation --
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these are the only technical terms, I'm not going into details --
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but this is how we enabled
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that light source
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to transmit data.
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You will say, "Okay, this is nice --
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a slide created in 10 minutes."
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But not only that.
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What we've done
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is we have also developed a demonstrator.
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And I'm showing for the first time in public
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this visible light demonstrator.
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And what we have here
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is no ordinary desk lamp.
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We fit in an LED light bulb,
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worth three U.S. dollars,
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put in our signal processing technology.
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And then what we have here is a little hole.
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And the light goes through that hole.
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There's a receiver.
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The receiver will convert these little, subtle changes in the amplitude
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that we create there
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into an electrical signal.
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And that signal is then converted back
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to a high-speed data stream.
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In the future we hope
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that we can integrate this little hole
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into these smart phones.
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And not only integrate a photo detector here,
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but maybe use the camera inside.
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So what happens
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when I switch on that light?
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As you would expect,
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it's a light, a desk lamp.
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Put your book beneath it and you can read.
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It's illuminating the space.
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But at the same time, you see this video coming up here.
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And that's a video, a high-definition video
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that is transmitted through that light beam.
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You're critical.
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You think, "Ha, ha, ha.
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This is a smart academic doing a little bit of tricks here."
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But let me do this.
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(Applause)
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Once again.
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Still don't believe?
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It is this light
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that transmits this high-definition video in a split stream.
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And if you look at the light,
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it is illuminating as you would expect.
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You don't notice with your human eye.
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You don't notice the subtle changes in the amplitude
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that we impress onto this light bulb.
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It's serving the purpose of illumination,
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but at the same time, we are able to transmit this data.
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And you see,
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even light from the ceiling comes down here to the receiver.
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It can ignore that constant light,
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because all the receiver's interested in
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are subtle changes.
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You also have a critical question now, and
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you say, "Okay,
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do I have to have the light on all the time
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to have this working?"
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And the answer is yes.
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But, you can dim down the light
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to a level that it appears to be off.
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And you are still able to transmit data -- that's possible.
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So I've mentioned to you the four challenges.
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Capacity:
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We have 10,000 times more spectrum,
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10,000 times more LEDs
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installed already in the infrastructure there.
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You would agree with me, hopefully,
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there's no issue of capacity anymore.
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Efficiency:
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This is data through illumination --
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it's first of all an illumination device.
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And if you do the energy budget,
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the data transmission comes for free --
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highly energy efficient.
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I don't mention the high energy efficiency
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of these LED light bulbs.
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If the whole world would deploy them,
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you would save hundreds of power plants.
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That's aside.
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And then I've mentioned the availability.
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You will agree with me that we have lights in the hospital.
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You need to see what to do.
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You have lights in an aircraft.
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So it's everywhere in a day there is light.
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Look around. Everywhere. Look at your smart phone.
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It has a flashlight, an LED flashlight.
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These are potential sources for high-speed data transmission.
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And then there's security.
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You would agree with me
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that light doesn't penetrate through walls.
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So no one, if I have a light here,
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if I have secure data,
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no one on the other side of this room through that wall
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would be able to read that data.
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And there's only data where there is light.
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So if I don't want that receiver to receive the data,
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then what I could do,
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turn it away.
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So the data goes in that direction, not there anymore.
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Now we can in fact see where the data is going to.
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So for me,
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the applications of it,
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to me, are beyond imagination at the moment.
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We have had a century of very nice, smart application developers.
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And you only have to notice, where we have light,
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there is a potential way to transmit data.
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But I can give you a few examples.
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Well you may see the impact already now.
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This is a remote operated vehicle
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beneath the ocean.
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And they use light to illuminate space down there.
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And this light can be used to transmit wireless data
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that these things [use] to communicate with each other.
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Intrinsically safe environments
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like this petrochemical plant --
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you can't use RF, it may generate antenna sparks,
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but you can use light -- you see plenty of light there.
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In hospitals,
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for new medical instruments;
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in streets for traffic control.
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Cars have LED-based headlights, LED-based back lights,
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and cars can communicate with each other
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and prevent accidents
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in the way that they exchange information.
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Traffic lights can communicate to the car and so on.
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And then you have these millions of street lamps
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deployed around the world.
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And every street lamp could be a free access point.
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We call it, in fact, a Li-Fi,
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light-fidelity.
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And then we have these aircraft cabins.
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There are hundreds of lights in an aircraft cabin,
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and each of these lights
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could be a potential transmitter of wireless data.
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So you could enjoy your most favorite TED video
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on your long flight back home.
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Online life. So that is a vision, I think, that is possible.
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So, all we would need to do
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is to fit a small microchip
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to every potential illumination device.
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And this would then combine
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two basic functionalities:
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illumination and wireless data transmission.
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And it's this symbiosis that I personally believe
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could solve the four essential problems
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that face us in wireless communication these days.
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And in the future,
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you would not only have 14 billion light bulbs,
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you may have 14 billion Li-Fis
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deployed worldwide --
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for a cleaner, a greener,
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and even a brighter future.
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Thank you.
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12:33
(Applause)
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