Intel Demos 7Gpbs Wireless Docking
Lucas123 writes "Intel for the first time demonstrated the Wireless Gigabit (WiGig) docking specification using an Ultrabook, which was able to achieve 7Gbps performance, ten times the fastest Wi-Fi networks based on the IEEE 802.11n standard. The WiGig medium access control (MAC) and physical (PHY) control specification operates in the unlicensed 60GHz frequency band, which has more spectrum available than the 2.4GHz and 5GHz bands used by existing Wi-Fi products. According to Ali Sadri, chairman of the WiGig Alliance, the specification also supports wireless implementations of HDMI and DisplayPort interfaces, as well as the High-Bandwidth Digital Content Protection (HDCP) scheme used to protect digital content transmitted over those interfaces. It scales to allow transmission of both compressed and uncompressed video."
WTF is a Gpbs ?
Giga Public Broadcasting Service ?
Global Positioning buzz saw?
Making pirated media superior to purchased media since 1999!
That's because no reasonable person expects there to be any effects. Wifi signal power is ridiculously low compared to many other applications of electromagnetic waves. Your microwave oven is allowed to leak more power than your wifi router is allowed to emit.
Why in the world would bandwidth need to "scale"? It's either fast enough for the highest required bit-rate or it isn't, slowing it down for lower amounts of traffic is pointless.
For those wondering who are too lazy to Google, 60 GHz is right in the middle of the resonance range of the oxygen molecule (O2), so it's attenuated by nothing but air. That limits its range to just a few kilometers at reasonable (read, unlicensed) power levels.
Of more practical interest, 60 GHz won't go through anything more solid than cloth. In particular interior walls block it. So this a in-the-same-room technology, and without some very fancy processing of multi-path bounce signals, it's basically a line of sight technology. In other words, a 60 GHz transmitter attached to your tower under your desk is going to have a hard time driving a monitor sitting on top of your desk. That's why the article waxes lyrical about laptops, which are usually set on top of the desk. Sadly, we're likely to be stuck with video cable for many years to come.
Of course silicon is dirt cheap (sand cheap?) these days, so possibly chips can be designed that can do that processing. I don't know what the latencies might be like though. It might be intolerable for controlling a mouse. You'd have to ask a radio guy.
How come it works just fine in Windows?
Sounds like a Linux problem to me.
Maybe you just don't know any better?
The eternal struggle of good vs. evil begins within one's self.
Maybe you just don't know any better?
I know better, and the AC you responded to is correct. 802.11n works just fine with Windows XP and 7. I would love it to work well with Linux too as I use several Linux machines including a laptop that would benefit from the higher bandwidth. They just haven't quite gotten the bugs out of the system yet.
It works great with OS X machines too. Are you still going to imply it isn't a Linux problem?
" 802.11n works just fine with Windows XP and 7"
Which explains why all of my 802.11n devices have to be set to 802.11g, in order to even connect to the wireless-N router, under both XP and 7.....
Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
Wireless is a clusterf*ck in general. It's something that sounds like a cool idea but has a lot of technical hurdles. Its kind of fine if you have no other choice but sucks when compared to the alternatives.
A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
...so it still makes much more sense to have a "home cloud" rather than depending on some stranger's server that sits some place on the other side of that network bottleneck.
That doesn't make 10x or 100x transfer rates any less useful.
A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
" 802.11n works just fine with Windows XP and 7"
Which explains why all of my 802.11n devices have to be set to 802.11g, in order to even connect to the wireless-N router, under both XP and 7.....
That sounds like a personal problem, and I'll counter your anecdotal evidence with the fact that my own 802.11n works just fine with my Windows machines at home as well as my Macs. My linux boxes are wired except for the laptop and that's a bit older so only supports G. I have no first hand experience with Linux not working with N but this thread is not the first time I've heard such complaints.
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