Technology | television Building an HDTV Without Wires Wireless high-def products expected by year's end By Laila Weir Posted Jan 18, 2008 11:39 AM CST Copied A man cleans the space between three high definition screens made by Hitachi before the official opening of the consumer electronics fair 'IFA 2007' on Thursday, Aug. 30, 2007 in Berlin, Germany. (AP Photo/Miguel Villagran) (Associated Press) Sick of all those cables tangled behind your TV or entertainment center? So are two companies that demonstrated products to wirelessly beam high-definition video and audio to TVs at this year’s Consumer Electronics Show. Pulse-Link is creating far-reaching signals, while SiBeam’s system can stream the highest quality HD video. The first products should hit the market by year’s end, reports Technology Review. SiBeam’s technology includes beam steering to keep video streaming seamlessly, so if a signal is interrupted by a person or an object blocking it, it gets automatically rerouted almost instantly. Pulse-Link plans to release products by the end of 2008, and SiBeam in 2009, but an industry analyst warns they’ll start out expensive and probably only filter down to cheaper systems a few years later—depending on consumer response. Read These Next That 'buy now, pay later' loan may soon hit your credit score. Hall of Famer Dave Parker dies Cops: Arizona 5th graders drew up plot to 'end' a classmate. LGBTQ+ Pride march defies Orban Report an error