Archive of July 2010
Qi certification service in TaiwanPosted on Thursday 28 July 2011, by Menno Treffers TÜV Rheinland announced the launch of a new independent compliance testing lab in Taiwan to meet the growing demand for Qi certification. TÜV Rheinland is now part of the ecosystem of services that is evolving around the Qi standard. This ecosystem consists of component suppliers, engineering services, manufacturing services, and now also test- and certification services. It makes business sense to invest in open standards! Tags: certification qi qi standard test lab tuv tuv rheinland wireless charging Placed in the categories: Companies and Products Link to this article
The Qi product pipelinePosted on Saturday 16 July 2011, by Menno Treffers Each Qi wireless charging product is tested by an independent test lab before it can be launched. The test lab issues a 'compliance certificate' when the product is found to be compatible with the Qi specification. The certificate is issued before a product is announced. That means you can see the pipeline of Qi product announcements by looking at the number of issued certificates. 
'Rx' means 'receiver'. These are phones, battery packs and other products that receive power.
'Tx' means 'wireless charging station'. Tags: qi qi standard wireless charging wireless power Placed in the categories: WPC Announcements/News Link to this article
A standard is not enoughPosted on Sunday 25 July 2010, by Menno Treffers The Qi standard is a document that describes how to design power transmitters and power receivers. It is a rather complicated text, more abstract than your typical product design documentation. It is more abstract because an interoperability standard tries to maximize the design freedom for product developers. Not everything is fixed and that can make it difficult to understand. Our goal is interoperability. A power receiver must work with all power transmitters. Interoperability follows automatically when the product developer follows the instructions in the standard. Right? Well, ... that is the theory. In practice it does not work like that. Even a properly reviewed specification can be ambigeous. Product developers can interpret a text in ways the editor never considered. And product developers can make mistakes. The result is a product that might not work with other products. Publishing the documentation of a standard is not enough. To achieve our goal we also need: * A set of test procedures that help developers to determine whether the product works correctly.
* A trademarked logo and a trademark license agreement to limit the use of the logo to products that work together.
* Certification by an independent test lab before products are allowed to carry the logo. The test procedures must cover all aspects of the standard. Everything that could possibly go wrong must be verified. It is interesting to note that, for standards like Qi, the documentation of the test procedures has more pages than the standard itself! Our customers will see the Qi logo and know: this product works with my other Qi products. That promise holds if the logo is used on properly tested products. No Qi logo on products that don't work! To protect Qi's promise, the logo is trademarked and you need a license to use the logo. That license makes the use of the logo dependent on certification by an independent test lab. Publishing a standard is not enough. Without test documentation, certification services, and a logo license agreement, interoperability is an illusion. Tags: qi qi standard wireless charging wireless power Placed in the categories: Standardization Link to this article
Qi low-power standard is readyPosted on Saturday 24 July 2010, by Menno Treffers The Qi low power standard is ready. This standard delivers up to 5 Watt into wireless power receivers. The technical specification will become available on August 30 as free download for everyone. I am now looking forward to see the first products with the Qi logo. The logo license program is ready too, as well as product certification services. The specification work group has developed a test specification. This test spec is used to determine whether a product is compliant or not. Only products that work according to the specifications carry the Qi logo. Before a product gets the logo an independent test lab must perform the compliance tests. These certification service will start in the beginning of August. Yes, Qi is ready! Tags: qi qi standard wireless charging wireless power wireless power consortium wpc Placed in the categories: WPC Announcements/News Link to this article
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