Keeping up with arts and entertainment news from Michigan
Provided by AGP
By AI, Created 4:20 PM UTC, May 18, 2026, /AGP/ – VOXMICRO introduced WAVIA at Xponential 2026 in Detroit as a patent-pending hardware foundation for configurable multi-radio RF modules. The first product built on the architecture is the AIRETOS E92 Wi-Fi 7 module family, which is sampling now, with licensing open to third-party module manufacturers.
Why it matters: - WAVIA is designed to cut the number of RF module SKUs manufacturers need to design, qualify and stock. - The architecture is meant to move band, power and chain-count changes through configuration, not board redesign. - VOXMICRO is offering WAVIA for licensing, which could widen adoption across product generations and outside the company’s own module line.
What happened: - VOXMICRO introduced WAVIA at Xponential 2026 in Detroit on May 11, 2026. - WAVIA is the architecture mark for VOXMICRO’s patent-pending configurable multi-radio RF module architecture. - The first product built on WAVIA is the AIRETOS E92 Class Wi-Fi 7 wireless module family. - AIRETOS E92 is sampling now. - The WAVIA mark is filed with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office in Nice Class 9.
The details: - WAVIA uses engineered substrate signal routing and distributed front-end topology as its hardware foundation. - The architecture is built around a configurable, multi-radio RF topology rather than a fixed-stack module pattern. - One architectural foundation can support different bands, chain counts and host integrations without recutting the underlying mechanical and routing premise. - VOXMICRO says module manufacturers can instantiate WAVIA configurations instead of designing one SKU per use case. - The regulatory dossier, host-PCB qualification and RF baseline travel with the architecture rather than with each SKU. - WAVIA is intended to reach robotics, AGV/AMR, drones and UAV, embedded compute, AR/VR and wearables, and portable medical and industrial-grade IoT. - The architecture also continues to serve enterprise access points, industrial gateways, high-density venues and carrier-grade infrastructure. - AIRETOS E92 ships in both module-down and slotted form factors. - VOXMICRO said WAVIA is offered for licensing across product generations and to third-party module manufacturers. - VOXMICRO is headquartered in Diamond Bar, California. - VOXMICRO operates the AIRETOS module brand and the OxfordTEC antenna brand. - The company designs and manufactures embedded wireless modules for industrial, robotic, mobility and infrastructure systems. - VOXMICRO listed more information about WAVIA and more information about VOXMICRO. - VOXMICRO also shared its LinkedIn page at company updates.
Between the lines: - WAVIA is positioned as a bridge between off-the-shelf slotted modules and full chip-down development. - That positioning suggests VOXMICRO is targeting customers that need more customization than standard modules offer, but less complexity than a custom RF platform. - The licensing model also points to an attempt to turn the architecture into a platform, not just a single product family.
What’s next: - VOXMICRO is opening WAVIA to third-party module manufacturers through licensing. - The AIRETOS E92 family is the first commercial expression of the architecture and the most immediate proof point for adoption. - Wider use of WAVIA will likely depend on how quickly manufacturers and OEMs adopt the configuration-based approach across new RF module designs.
Disclaimer: This article was produced by AGP Wire with the assistance of artificial intelligence based on original source content and has been refined to improve clarity, structure, and readability. This content is provided on an “as is” basis. While care has been taken in its preparation, it may contain inaccuracies or omissions, and readers should consult the original source and independently verify key information where appropriate. This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, investment, or other professional advice.
Sign up for:
The daily local news briefing you can trust. Every day. Subscribe now.
We sent a one-time activation link to: .
Confirm it's you by clicking the email link.
If the email is not in your inbox, check spam or try again.
is already signed up. Check your inbox for updates.