PDA

View Full Version : Wi-Fi Fights Back Against WiMax With 100Mbps



Razer0
18-05-2005, 08:26 PM
With every man and his dog rushing to proclaim that the advent of WiMax will mean the death of Wi-Fi, proponents of the most popular local area wireless technology believe there's a healthy future ahead for it - and it doesn't depend on the laptop.
Ajay Mishra, manager of the WLAN service providers solution desk at Cisco, said Wi-Fi has already become a must-have for the enterprise.
"Wireless LAN has really moved to business critical," he said. "Voice is becoming the primary application."
A standards body is set to ratify 802.11n by September next year, giving Wi-Fi a throughput of 100Mbps and helping to bolster its potential uses in bandwidth-heavy situations.
Mobiles are also targeting Wi-Fi, according to Mishra. "Most tier one, tier two [mobile handset makers] and most of the PDA vendors are working on these [converged handsets]," he said. "What this is doing is driving wireless LAN applications from vertical to horizontal, especially on the voice side."
BT has already eyed up taking fixed-line broadband out of the PC with the ongoing Project Nevis, and the Wi-Fi Alliance believes there's a similar future for wireless. Franz Hanzlik, MD of the Wi-Fi Alliance, believes converged devices and consumer electronics leave the technology with more room to expand.
"We're starting to now see opportunities to move beyond the PC and into a couple of very, very interesting sets of opportunities," he said.
"Look at what's happened with digital cameras on phones... we're seeing a future very much similar for Wi-Fi on these devices."
The Alliance is also hoping that CIOs will opt to use mobile over Wi-Fi to save cash on their mobile bills.
David Cohen, senior marketing manager at hotspot provider Broadreach, said: "Wi-Fi has had a lot of success from the productivity angle - it's a real dollars and cents issue."
And, according to the Wi-Fi Alliance's Hanzlik, the WiMax and Wi-Fi bodies aren't at each other's throats: "We have a very good relationship with the WiMax Forum - we're trying to find areas where the technology is complementary."
Original URL: http://networks.silicon.com/lans/0,39024663,391...

Source: http://www.netstumbler.com/2005/05/11/wi_fi_fights_back_against_wimax_with_100mbps/

stoke
18-05-2005, 10:01 PM
Good news. September next year will see the potential for a strong WI-FI MESH to wipe-out existing CELL + WIMAX crap.

Now if somebody'll produce a phone that works on 802.11b -> n.
What is taking so looooong ? It's like the petrol vs hydrogen debacle.

rebel
19-05-2005, 11:58 AM
Good news. September next year will see the potential for a strong WI-FI MESH to wipe-out existing CELL + WIMAX crap.

Now if somebody'll produce a phone that works on 802.11b -> n.
What is taking so looooong ? It's like the petrol vs hydrogen debacle.
Check out the Nokia N91. It supports 802.11b.
http://www.infosyncworld.com/news/n/5944.html

captainwifi
19-05-2005, 07:14 PM
mmm yea just one small problem. Atheros and Intel are not releasing the drivers
for 802.11a/n/i and Wimax for Linux as far as I know. Locustworld.com and
cuwireless.net are only using 802.11b because of this. The mesh only works on Linux. Wimax/802.11n Linux drivers for www.locustworld.com meshboxes will simply mean the end of Telkom as we know it, their only use will be the fiber backhaul to England.

MaxTheITpro
13-10-2006, 05:57 PM
mmm yea just one small problem. Atheros and Intel are not releasing the drivers
for 802.11a/n/i and Wimax for Linux as far as I know. Locustworld.com and
cuwireless.net are only using 802.11b because of this. The mesh only works on Linux. Wimax/802.11n Linux drivers for www.locustworld.com meshboxes will simply mean the end of Telkom as we know it, their only use will be the fiber backhaul to England.

Hey great info Captain Wifi. Can you tell me your thoughts on Locustworld's product offerings to WiMAX hardware?? What about the issue of operating in the unlicensed spectrum if other WiFi networks come aboard? And for backhaul, how do the distances work for their hardware? At least WiMAX can transmit up to 30 Km between towers...well depending on the hardware used. Anyways, thank you for mentioning LocustWorld. I've been on their site for the past 2 days learning about their stuff. So basically their hardware is upgradeable with a firmware upgrade??

TheRoDent
14-10-2006, 01:08 AM
mmm yea just one small problem. Atheros and Intel are not releasing the drivers
for 802.11a/n/i and Wimax for Linux as far as I know. Locustworld.com and
cuwireless.net are only using 802.11b because of this. The mesh only works on Linux. Wimax/802.11n Linux drivers for www.locustworld.com meshboxes will simply mean the end of Telkom as we know it, their only use will be the fiber backhaul to England.

Wrong on many accounts.

Firstly:
madwifi currently supports 802.11a/b/g and is supported by Atheros. The HAL (Hardware Abstraction Layer) is the only closed portion, and is essentially akin to firmware for the devices. The HAL is available for all supported madwifi architectures, so it's a non-issue. Atheros regularly contribute to madwifi and maintain an internal branch of it which gets dropped publically every so often. 802.11n support will be a feature of the HAL, and since madwifi-ng is actually part of Atheros' core development strategy for access points 802.11n support is a given.

The intel IPW drivers are also fairly mature, and the same relationship exists with Intel for the Linux drivers.

Secondly:

CUWIN's software is based entirely on netbsd, not Linux

802.11n will be well supported in open-source software.