Tuesday, October 07, 2008
Google  
Web voicendata.com
Archive    
Find out how IT can help your business capitalize on change.
 Home > GOLDBOOK 2005 > EMERGING TECHNOLOGY 802.11N: Wire's New Nemesis
  GOLDBOOK 2005
EMERGING TECHNOLOGY 802.11N: Wire's New Nemesis
802.11n promises the ultimate-wireless systems replacing data-hungry wired networks
Saturday, March 05, 2005

802.11n is the emerging wireless local area network that is being widely recognised as successor to the prevalent 802.11a/g. The wireless industry expects 802.11n to revolutionise the scope of wireless LAN and take it beyond its current appeal. Not only 802.11n promises a minimum throughput of 100 Mbps (some vendors trying for 500 Mbps to 630 Mbps), it is likely to target markets beyond home/enterprise networking and consumer electronics, segments that 802.11a/g now serves. Promoters of the standard believe that 802.11n will serve markets like cellular telephony, mobile radio, personal computing, public access, and VoIP. The ultimate promise of 802.11n: Let wireless systems replace data-hungry wired networks such as those serving groups involved in computer-aided design. According to the Institute for Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE), as enterprise networks in offices and campuses typically have 100 Mbps wired network connections, 802.11n will create parity between wired and wireless systems, so enterprises can extend their wireless networks to areas where the rate of existing wireless products has been insufficient.

However, 802.11n-based WLAN is unlikely to reach users until the beginning of 2006 as IEEE has still not finalised the standards and the industry is almost vertically split on the specifics of standardization. Unlike 802.11a/g, 802.11n is facing a divided industry largely on the issue of spectrum utilization. On the one side is a group of companies called TGn Sync (Task Group n Synchronization) and on the other is WwiSE (worldwide spectrum efficiency). The leading companies in TGn Sync are Agere, Atheros, Cisco, Intel, Qualcomm, Marvell, Nokia, Nortel, Panasonic, Philips, Samsung, Sanyo, Sony, and Toshiba. WWiSE includes companies such as Broadcom, Conexant, Texas Instruments, Airgo, STMicroelectronics, Bermai, and Realtek.

While both groups agree on the use of multiple input multiple output (MIMO) antenna technology for taking 802.11n to its promised throughput, they disagree on the use of channel bands. TGn Sync is for 40MHz channels in the 5GHz spectrum (same as 802.11a). WWiSE supports 20MHz channels in the 2.4GHz (used by 802.11b/g).

Amidst all these, some vendors have begun shipping 802.11n products or are in the process of doing so. Vendors like Agere and Atheros have released consumer-oriented HDTV and video products based on the specifications that TGn Sync supports. There is a new term for these pre-standard products-pre-802.11n. While these products offer the speed and other benefits that 802.11n ultimately promises and they might be backward compatible with 802.11b/g, they may not work with the 802.11n based on the final standards. Buyers of these products could be in for a raw deal. And this worrying Wi-Fi Alliance, and it recently asked vendors not to move too fast on 802.11n. Arguing that the 802.11n standards being developed by the IEEE are still not final, the alliance said it would be difficult for it certify features based on the 802.11n unless the standards are finally ratified. The alliance is not expecting the standards to be final for the next two years. Its main argument is that releasing products based on pre-802.11n would very much mean cheating the consumers. The alliance said it would reserve the right to revoke the Wi-Fi certification of vendors' products if they move too fast to introduce such features in a way that detracts from the existing interoperability levels.

However, chip makers like Broadcom, one of the first to market with 802.11n's predecessor 802.11g, have decide not to push its 802.11n chips to customers until the IEEE is closer to final standardization.

Next Page :

The 802.11n Promise

Page(s)   1  2  

ENTERPRISE PBX: From Circuit to Packet Switch
ENTERPRISE NETWORK INTEGRATION: Wanted a Biz Advisor
ENTERPRISE MOBILE APPLICATION: SMS Rules the World 
 





 

Current Issue


Download reports make multiple decisions


e-Book guide to improve your PPM Process


Complexicity or Simplicity - Choose





Your Opinion Matters

CIO ROLE TOWARDS MOBILITY - ADMINISTRATION

CIO ROLE TOWARDS MOBILITY - ADMINISTRATION


   CIOL Services
IT News | IT Jobs | IT Outsourcing | IT Shopping
 



  For Voice&Data Print Subscription
  [ Magazine Subscription ]  [ Contact Info ]  [ Advertise : Online | Magazine | Advertising Print ]

 
Other CyberMedia web sites
[Dataquest]  [PCQuest]  [CIOL]  [Living Digital]  [IDC India]
[DQ Channels]  [The DQweek]  [CyberMedia careers]
[CyberMedia Events]   [CyberMedia Digital]  [Cyber Astro]  [CyberMedia India]
[Global Services]  [BioSpectrum]  [BioSpectrum Asia]
[Computer Shopper]   [College Buying Guide]   [Voice&DataConnect

CyberMedia India Ltd

 
  Copyright © CMIL. All rights reserved.
Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission is prohibited.
Usage of this web site is subject to terms and conditions.
Broken links? Problems with site? Send email to
webmaster@ciol.com