Depends in part on what your data is.
Lots of vendors do serial or serial-to-ethernet (serial server) radio communications. B&B Electronics' catalog has a number of brands.
Phoenix Contact has I/O radio - analog-in to analog-out, discrete-in to discrete-out or analog/discrete in to Modbus serial out. I have had great success with its full 1 watt power for I/O wireless. All frequency hopping at 900Mhz.
Honeywell's XYR 5000 has one-way, battery powered transmitters that go to a central receiver which can do either analog/discrete out or Modbus serial out. Freq hopper at 900 Mhz.
I saw Honeywell'sust released XYR 6000 at the ISA show. It's a mesh network that requires a PC to administer a periodic security code updates through a wired gateway to all wireless nodes on the network - eihter mesh nodes or transmitter nodes. It's in a whole different category of security than the stuff I mentioned above. Very high security level. A node is rejected unless it is security approved beforehand.
The mesh nodes are comprised of 3 independent radio systems in one box:
- transmitter I/O network
- Wi-Fi band
- backbone for mesh network
The claim is that each network is optimized for its intended data and its intention is to deal with RFID, personnel locators, and other wireless technologies, in addition to I/O. It appears to be a well engineered, secure system for today's wireless and for expansion over time.
Dan