Smartphone users tired of watching YouTube videos with an intermittent freeze can expect faster download times thanks to a piece of technology developed by Chinese University.
The technology, likened to a 'turbo motor' by its inventor, Professor Jack Lee Yiu-bun, associate director of CUHK's Centre for Innovation and Technology, is slated to catapult the world into faster mobile internet access.
And while it won't change the way smartphones work or the way Web content providers run their sites, it will keep impatient users happy.
'Instead of building a turbo motor for every car on the road, we built a turbo motor for the road,' Lee said, explaining that his innovation speeds up the operations of mobile internet access networks, allowing for quicker download speeds.
Mike Wang Jianya, Nokia Siemens Networks' general manager for Taiwan, Hong Kong and Macau, playfully refers to the device as a 'magic box' that, placed in a network, accelerates the speeds of internet applications by a factor of three, according to recent tests. Nokia Siemens Networks collaborated with the university on the project.
The device can operate across several different technology systems and also allows internet applications to make full use of bandwidth, which may not only save time for mobile phone users but cut production costs for Web content providers.