Wireless Communication Stocks List

Wireless Communication Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
May 28 QCOM Time to Buy T-Mobile (TMUS) or Qualcomm's (QCOM) Stock for Higher Highs?
May 28 MU Micron Technology to Report Fiscal Third Quarter Results on June 26, 2024
May 28 IDN Lincoln Electric Dips 21% in 3 Months: Will It Recover?
May 28 IDN Shares of Apogee Rally 77% in a Year: Here's Why
May 28 SO Southern Company Invests in Johnson Energy Storage
May 28 VRT Reasons Why Roper (ROP) Deserves to be in Your Portfolio Now
May 28 VRT Vertiv: Riding The Nvidia AI Growth Wave And Outperforming
May 28 QCOM Qualcomm’s 2023 Corporate Responsibility Report: Supply Chain Management
May 28 MU Is Micron Technology (MU) Outperforming Other Computer and Technology Stocks This Year?
May 28 VRT Cooling for AI is a Hot Stock Market Trade–for Now
May 28 MU Netlist (NLST) Wins $445 Million in Patent Violation Case
May 28 QCOM 3 Wireless Stocks Likely to Benefit Despite Sector Blues
May 28 SO Is Southern Co (NYSE:SO) The Best Utilities Stock to Ride the AI Boom in 2024?
May 28 MU Wall Street Breakfast Podcast: Hess Shareholders Set To Vote On Chevron Deal
May 28 MU Update: Micron Technology Ordered to Pay Netlist $445 Million in Patent Infringement Case
May 28 MU Micron said to plan new DRAM chip factory in Hiroshima
May 28 T AT&T: Dividend Increases Could Return, Bringing Valuation Multiple Expansion
May 27 VRT Looking Into Vertiv Hldgs's Recent Short Interest
May 27 QCOM Qualcomm: Continues Surging Higher (Technical Analysis)
May 27 T 5 Magnificent Stocks Being Bought for Warren Buffett's $646 Million "Secret" Portfolio
Wireless Communication

Wireless communication, or sometimes simply wireless, is the transfer of information or power between two or more points that are not connected by an electrical conductor. The most common wireless technologies use radio waves. With radio waves distances can be short, such as a few meters for Bluetooth or as far as millions of kilometers for deep-space radio communications. It encompasses various types of fixed, mobile, and portable applications, including two-way radios, cellular telephones, personal digital assistants (PDAs), and wireless networking. Other examples of applications of radio wireless technology include GPS units, garage door openers, wireless computer mice, keyboards and headsets, headphones, radio receivers, satellite television, broadcast television and cordless telephones. Somewhat less common methods of achieving wireless communications include the use of other electromagnetic wireless technologies, such as light, magnetic, or electric fields or the use of sound.
The term wireless has been used twice in communications history, with slightly different meaning. It was initially used from about 1890 for the first radio transmitting and receiving technology, as in wireless telegraphy, until the new word radio replaced it around 1920. The term was revived in the 1980s and 1990s mainly to distinguish digital devices that communicate without wires, such as the examples listed in the previous paragraph, from those that require wires or cables. This became its primary usage in the 2000s, due to the advent of technologies such as mobile broadband, Wi-Fi and Bluetooth.
Wireless operations permit services, such as long-range communications, that are impossible or impractical to implement with the use of wires. The term is commonly used in the telecommunications industry to refer to telecommunications systems (e.g. radio transmitters and receivers, remote controls, etc.) which use some form of energy (e.g. radio waves, acoustic energy,) to transfer information without the use of wires. Information is transferred in this manner over both short and long distances.

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