802.11n Should Be Finalized By September 104
adeelarshad82 writes "It's probable that the 802.11n standard will finally be approved at a scheduled IEEE meeting this September, ending a contentious round of infighting that has delayed the standard for years. For the 802.11n standard, progress has been agonizingly slow, dating back almost five years to 2004, when 802.11g held sway. It struggled throughout 2005 and 2006, when members supposedly settled on the TGnSync standard, then formed the Enhanced Wireless Consortium in 2006 to speed the process along. A draft version of 802.11n was approved in January 2006, prompting the first wave of routers based on the so-called draft-n standard shortly thereafter."
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Compatibility with Draft-N (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Compatibility with Draft-N (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Compatibility with Draft-N (Score:5, Informative)
Or Draft-N will be a subset of N such that N compliance implies Draft-N compliance.
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Re:Compatibility with Draft-N (Score:5, Interesting)
I would think that it would have to be, otherwise no one will use the real standard due to backwards compatibility.
Since I've seen Draft-N devices from different companies that had a bloody hard time talking to each other, I have to ask: If it is Draft-N backwards compatible, WHOSE implementation of Draft-N will it be backwards compatible with?
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I think most of the Draft-N hardware has allowed for firmware updates - which could allow you to implement the necessary changes to make something N compliant.
Most do, but there's a big difference between theory and practice. I notice a lot of older (but still being sold) Draft N stuff that isn't even receiving driver updates anymore (cough, cough, DLink). If a company can't be bothered to fix incompatibilities caused by XP SP3 or Vista SP1, what hope is there for getting firmware to fix incompatibilities with nonDraft-N?
Re:Compatibility with Draft-N (Score:5, Insightful)
Which is, of course, the mistake of releasing, producing to, and buying products based on a draft of a standard: there's nothing standard about it.
Trying to get compatibility to the draft could prove difficult, depending on the changes. If it isn't there, that's what you get for buying non-compliant hardware. Typical early-adopter penalty.
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It's sad that you're subject to the "early-adopter penalty" after purchasing a product that's been out for nearly 5 years...
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It's sad that you're subject to the "early-adopter penalty" after purchasing a product that's been out for nearly 5 years...
It's sad to expect that purchasing a product built on the first draft of a protocol, rather than an IEEE standard, will be forward compatible.
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It's sad to expect that purchasing a product built on the first draft of a protocol, rather than an IEEE standard, will be forward compatible.
Though they do write that word "Draft" damn tiny. It's all RANGEBOOSTER N! and N ULTRA RANGEPLUS! in large fonts.
And even the fine print is misleading. "Built on the latest 802.11n Draft technology!" "Upgrade to the newest 802.11n Draft wireless system!" The precise meaning of "draft" is never explained, anywhere; the word "standard" is only conspicuous in its absence. I know that a person should research, but in a world with programs like Windows Vista and Photoshop CS, people are used to random irreleva
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Right, and I feel like the producers are the ones most at fault. They should know better, and the name "802.11n" should never have been allowed to be attached to the draft, since it's not an IEEE standard.
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As far as draft-N goes, my apple airport talks to a couple of Dell draft-N notebooks, a Thinkpad, my mac mini, and some china-spec draft-N card in my main home PC.
And in the meantime i've been able to actually stream high-def-ish content over 802.11n...
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The problem with that theory is that most products don't plainly say it is based on a draft protocol. They simply say they are based on 802.11N. Any indication that it is a draft is hidden in fine print (if there at all).
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Not on the one I bought. Said "draft" on the outside of the box. I knew I was taking a risk when I bought it, but went ahead, and it worked brilliantly. The g connection which had been desperately dodgy became pretty solid with n (router and receiver from same manufacturer). Not rock solid, but dropping out only every day or two rather than several times an hour.
Re:Compatibility with Draft-N (Score:5, Funny)
Oh don't worry about that. We'll just fix that in the final spec.
Yours truly
IEEE 802.11N technical committee
Re:Compatibility with Draft-N (Score:4, Insightful)
Even if it is there, how many non-techie people are going to know that draft n means "this is an unfinished protocol that most likely will change in the future, possibly rendering this device incompatible with devices based on the finalize protocol".
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It can rever back to G, so people who don't know what N means probably don't even need it and won't notice the difference anyway.
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For much the same reason as you don't try to do surgery without going to medical school
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Uhhhh, yeah sure. That would be nice if they didn't sell the draft-n routers at best buy along with all the ones that are based on final specs and with a sufficiently clear warning about future problems. As it is, they ARE available in the store, and it ISN'T sufficiently clear just what they are buying into, so you end up with people going to the store, looking at the offerings, and saying "I could buy this g-thingy for $x, or I could pay a littler more and get this n-thingy which is faster....I'll buy the
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The problem there is that the hardware vendors walk away from their products so fast and stop releasing updates of any kind for them after six months.
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Re:Compatibility with Draft-N (Score:5, Informative)
Quite likely, actually. As long as your wireless devices are WiFi Draft N capable. There are two "waves" of Draft N devices (2.5, if you want to go technical). The first was released sometime around 2006 or so, and they were early revision Draft N, the ones that everyone basically said "Avoid at all costs" because of incompatibilities, interference, etc. These are most likely NOT going to work with 802.11n. The "half" wave came shortly after, where we had a flood of 802.11g routers with "extended range" and "MIMO" - they are basically early revision N wireless except re-badged as working with 802.11b/g, and using the N bits to give better range and speed.
Then in late 2007/2008, came what we know currently as Draft N, when the WiFi Alliance (no relation to IEEE - the WiFi Alliance is a consortium of manufacturers to ensure interoperability) decided to start testing and approving devices based on the final draft spec. These will have the WiFi logo with Draft N in it, being approved for Draft N "standard" and compliance. Part of the requirement was that it was firmware upgradable to 802.11n when it finally came out. Whether or not a firmware upgrade will come out, though is another question.
Depending on how the WiFi Alliance holds out, they may require that all WiFi-N devices must support Draft N. Or they may just say "screw you all" and make them incompatible.
The IEEE is the stadnards body behind the spec, 802.11 being the wireless part, 802.3 being Ethernet, etc. They write the spec. Thus, standards compliance includes 802.11b/g/n, which are documents on how these devices are to work.
WiFi is a trademark of the WiFI Alliance, so technically, calling 802.11? devices "WiFi" is incorrect, as only tested an approved devices carry the WiFi trademark stamp. They approve devices after doing interoperability testing, figuring out that consumers would be best served if devices actually interoperate (and thus everyone can sell more). Thus they created the WiFi trademark, and the approval stamps you see WiFI A, WiFi-B, WiFi G, WiFi Draft N, and soon, WiFi N.
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You're trying to be funny, right?
Obviously, you're too young to remember SCSI-1.
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It was compatible - well some subset of the operation was vaguely compatible with some other subsets of some competitors product. Apart from that, it had enhanced performance Yay, better than compatible!
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I suspect a lot of companies are gun shy about "rushing" into any standards after the sphincter-busting tactics of Rambus in the JEDEC memory standards fiasco.
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What does one nefarious company involved with a separate standards organization have to do with any other company involved with any other standards organization? Please forgive me if this was the appropriate place to rant about Rambus, Inc.
Re:California Budget (Score:4, Insightful)
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You haven't missed out on much.
I did try to go the N-route, until I discovered that different devices operate on differetn frequencies. Buying teo draft-N certified products I thought I had a good chance of them working together.
Turns out one was for 2.4GHz band and the other for the 5GHz band.
Both were certified and one of them metioned nothing of frequencies outside the box.
If the standard actually allows this, I don't know. Beware...
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I don't know why you were modded -1, Troll; in the time between the 802.11n standard being worked on and then being finalized, we've had a war end and subsequently being again, a presidential election, numerous state elections, several revisions of Windows 7, two new Ubuntu releases, Duke Nukem Forever was finally canceled, speculative trading of oil causing major financial headaches for the American SUV market, and the banking and housing market bubbles finally popped.
In fact, California and New York may a
So... (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:IEEE FAIL! (Score:5, Insightful)
Trouble is, with something like Wifi, where much of the value lies in ubiquity and interoperability, there really isn't a "forward" to move toward without a standard(official, informal consensus, or de-facto standard + clones).
Hooray, I guess? (Score:2)
My computers can't even saturate 802.11g.
Re:Hooray, I guess? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Hooray, I guess? (Score:4, Interesting)
I get 2 bars on my iPhone from my Linksys WRT 610N from about 20 feet away through two thin walls (in the bathroom of my one bedroom apartment). The upside is that that particular router has 2 radios, so it can run on 2.4GHz simultaneously, allowing me to access it from outside where the 5GHz doesn't reach.
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Re:Hooray, I guess? (Score:5, Insightful)
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I get 2 bars on my iPhone ... (in the bathroom of my one bedroom apartment).
Note to self: Never buy hax0r_this's used iPhone. (It's been "flagged").
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I've got two new-ish Macs, and it's absolutely painful to transfer files between them over G. Draft N (dlink router) isn't MUCH better, when you consider how fast USB2.0 or Firewire is, but sometimes I just can't be bothered to hook up the cables.
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3 years ago, I would have killed for 300 Mbps wireless (even if I only got half of that in actual use).
Today I'm transferring 15 GB MKVs. By the time I'm anywhere near ready to upgrade to N, I'll be moving around 50 GB blu-ray images.
Running a wire across floors is ridiculous.
(Can't run it through the wall without cutting into drywall and drilling through the fire block... and this is an apartment...)
I figure my solution in the near future will involve an eSATA connection.
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Maybe the better solution is getting out of your apartment once in a while.
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(Can't run it through the wall without cutting into drywall and drilling through the fire block... and this is an apartment...)
I live in an apartment I own (saying it like that in case "condo" is not a universally recognized term) - is your problem that you don't own it and so can't alter it? Or is there some other reason? What is the "fire block" you mention? The only fire protection we have is fire resistant grade drywall (thicker and more fire resistant than the drywall for interior walls) but it has
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Correct - we rent.
A fire block is a literal blocking in the wall space that prevents the spread of fire. Without it, all that open air between the drywall layers of your walls is just like a road map for the fire to spread to each and every room.
A fire block is typically a 2x4. It's not meant to stop the fire, but to prevent your house from being completely engulfed in flames in 20 seconds.
In my situation, I wanted to drop a line from upstairs to downstairs. The cable line comes in downstairs, and is spl
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Re:Hooray, I guess? (Score:4, Informative)
Try streaming HD video, especially when there is some distance between you and your access point. Then you will understand why N is long overdue.
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I know Buffalo Tech has discontinued the infiniti N router of mine.
There's some DLink Draft-N wireless cards that don't - and apparently won't ever - have XP SP3 compatible drivers.
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What we really need is some sort of a law that says that you can't claim to support a spec unless it's tested with relevant exceptions for small scale hardware producers and hobbyists.
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How are the Belkins doing? In the early days of N, they were the only ones that actually worked as advertised. Dunno about now.
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How are the Belkins doing? In the early days of N, they were the only ones that actually worked as advertised. Dunno about now.
Good question. And one I can't answer. All the Belkins we have are G, as far as I remember. The caprice of a supplier or owner, I guess. As far as general use, all I know is that while we sell less Belkin than Linksys or DLink, I can't remember a Belkin ever coming back.
Oh goody (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Oh goody (Score:4, Funny)
Twice the distance? so I'll have 4 times the routers to steal internet access?
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If you use the area of the circle then it solves to 4 times. Replace r by 2r in your equation and you get a result 4x larger.
In reality the increase will be determined more by the geography of the surrounding area.
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and Wine hit 1.0
Yay (Score:5, Funny)
now i can finally use the technology that i've been using for the past 3 years!
No (Score:3, Funny)
802.11n SHOULD HAVE BEEN finalized over a year ago.
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802.11o (Score:2)
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802.11o looks to be free, but 802.11p is used. But given the way 802.11, 802.11a-k,m,n,p,r-z are allocated, they've already gone into the double letters. I'm guessing the missing letters were from committees that didn't quite make it or disbanded.
Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/802.11#Standard_and_amendments [wikipedia.org]
I sugges
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Troll much? (Score:3, Insightful)
Jeez did someone get a little trigger happy with the troll mod in this thread?
Re:Troll much? (Score:4, Insightful)
Clearly someone doesn't want any mention that the standard was delayed.
They probably think this line from the summary is trolling too: "ending a contentious round of infighting that has delayed the standard for years."
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They probably think this line from the summary is trolling too: "ending a contentious round of infighting that has delayed the standard for years."
It is a troll - it implies those working on products were in-fighting, when it was the Australian government that screwed everything up [wikipedia.org], at least in recent history.
Great news (Score:4, Funny)
On another note, imagine how much the nerd herd is going to have to work to sell a netowrk product now.
Chuck: "OK, you can get this router which is a draft N, but this new N product will do everything the draft N product does for 20$ more"
Client: "All these letters confuse me and make me belligerent. Can't we only use one letter? "
Chuck: "Ok, howabout N?"
Client: "Why not something simpler, like A, A is the best you know."
Chuck: "Just give me 150$ for the router a 75$ for an extended warranty."
Client: "Here you go, I am easily parted from my money."
I thought they renamed it... (Score:3, Funny)
to Wyfy
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More likeliy, it's going to be Wifiz
Comment removed (Score:3, Insightful)
What next? (Score:3, Funny)
Another worthless 'standard'.... (Score:2)
....that will be immediately supplanted by yet another 'standard,' once again brought to you by the moronic greed-heads who couldn't come to an agreement in time to get 802.11n out the door before it was already obsolescent.
designing products with draft standards (Score:4, Insightful)
I have a copy of one of the draft PCI specifications. In big bold letters it tells the reader to "NOT DESIGN PRODUCTS BASED ON THIS DRAFT STANDARD." Because the very definition of "draft" means that it's not complete and it's likely that the final specification will deviate from the draft in some ways.
I suppose the standards folks have no real way of enforcing that edict (an aside: the USB Implementers group are particularly toothless), but still -- anyone who buys a product based on a draft spec should not be surprised when it doesn't work with products built to the released spec.
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CSIRO? (Score:2)
Does this mean that CSIRO finally signed the Letter of Assurance that IEEE has been asking for?
To avoid confusion... (Score:1)