Motorola has agreed to
acquire UK manufacturer
Orthogon Systems
for an undisclosed sum.
Orthogon specialises in equipment using
Orthogonal
Frequency Division Modulation (OFDM) technology for point-to-point high
speed wireless network connections with guaranteed uptimes for corporate
customers and rural networks.
The technology uses a composite of radio bands which results in high noise
resistance and makes it immune to physical obstacles between the transmitter and
recipient.
OFDM can be used to connect office buildings or to provide wireless internet
services to small villages where a wired infrastructure would be too expensive.
Orthogon has "thousands" of deployments in 53 countries, according to
Motorola, which plans to use the acquisition to build out wireless broadband
offerings under its
Motowi4
brand. These include WiMax, Mesh Solutions and Canopy products.
Greg Brown, president of networks and enterprise business at Motorola, said:
"Orthogon's products and technologies will advance Motorola's vision of seamless
mobility by providing customers with easy, uninterrupted access to communication
and information."
Do you agree?
Have your say on this article