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The Next Step for Wi-Fi: Low-latency, Gigabit 802.11ac

The next big step for Wi-Fi is to make the leap to gigabit capacity with 802.11ac. As part of its Wi-Fi Day celebrations (08/02/11), Qualcomm Atheros hosted a press event in Silicon Valley to discuss how this future Wi-Fi will develop. The next rev of Wi-Fi technology, expected later this year, promises this performance boost along with new multi-user, multi-simultaneous stream capabilities.

The Wi-Fi standards have moved all the way through the alphabet from 802.11a, 802.11b, g, n, etc., and now use a double letter designation.

“802.11ac is the next big deal” said Bill McFarland, VP of Technology for Qualcomm Atheros, because it upgrades both the PHY and MAC layers for a greater than a 2x boost in rate-at-range of HD video streaming and will see widespread deployment in consumer electronics fairly quickly as it displaces 802.11n silicon.

Some key attributes of 802.11ac:

McFarland also provided an update on the 60 GHz .11ad standard, which leverages even wider channels for in-room connectivity at up to 7 Gbps. The 60 GHz Wi-Fi would offer a true network connection, differing from other high-speed cabling option, such as Thunderbolt or USB 3.0 which are not IP-based. McFarland believes 802.11ac and 802.11ad will be complementary. In May, Qualcomm Atheros introduced the industry’s first tri-band Wi-Fi chipset that integrates the multi-gigabit performance of in-room 60 GHz band with seamless handoff to 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz band Wi-Fi. The chipset was developed in partnership with Wilocity, a developer of 60 GHz multi-gigabit wireless chipsets.

McFarland expects chips for 802.11ac to begin sampling later this year. Chips for 60 GHz 802.11ad may sample a bit earlier, but he expects these will have a longer product design cycle, so 802.11ac products will probably appear on the market first and have a faster adoption curve. http://www.qualcomm-atheros.com

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