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Wireless Networking Hardware

Qualcomm's New 802.11ax Chips Will Ramp Up Your Wi-Fi (cnet.com) 53

Your home Wi-Fi performance could soon get much better thanks to new Wi-Fi chips that Qualcomm announced today, the IPQ8074 system-on-chip (SoC) for broadcasters (routers and access points) and the QCA6290 SoC for receivers (Wi-Fi devices). They belong to the first end-to-end commercial Wi-Fi portfolio to support the all-new 802.11ax standard. From a report on CNET: Qualcomm says the IPQ8074 is a highly-integrated all-in-one platform designed for access points, gateways and routers. The 14nm chip integrates an 11ax radio, MAC and baseband, and a quad-core 64-bit A53 CPU as well as a dual-core network accelerator. It uses a 12x12 Wi-Fi configuration (8x8 on the 5GHz band and 4x4 on the 2.4GHz band) and supports MU-MIMO for uplink. As a result, it can deliver up to 4.8 Gbps while maintaining fast connections over a larger coverage area than any 802.11ac chip. On the client side, Qualcomm says the QCA6290 SoC can offer up to a 4x increase in throughput speed in a crowded network. It supports 2x2 MU-MIMO and can realize the full benefits of the 8x8 MU-MIMO thanks to its 8x8 sounding mechanism. The chip can combine 2.4GHz and 5GHz bands using its Dual Band Simultaneous (DBS) feature to deliver up to 1.8 Gbps Wi-Fi speed. Compared with 802.11ac, the chip can reduce power consumption by two-thirds.
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Qualcomm's New 802.11ax Chips Will Ramp Up Your Wi-Fi

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    Finally some good MIMO tech coming to replace AC. I was a bit disappointed when I purchased my first AC router thinking the dual band would be for simultaneous connections. Boy was I wrong. Advertising lingo confused me into thinking it was something it wasn't. Sounds like AX MIMO is what I thought AC was going to be. Reduction in TDP is a welcome upgrade too as most routers do not have active cooling and some models were burning out from the load. I would prefer a router that all things being equal,

    • by TWX ( 665546 )

      I would prefer a router that all things being equal, the one with active cooling would likely get my purchase.

      I think that you'd find yourself in the minority, especially when the fans get dirty and start making noise. It'll be even worse for those who ceiling-mount their WAPs since it'll likely be unobstructed by anything that would block the noise.

    • Now only if that AP that has capability of 4.something Gbps would be connected by more than a single 1Gbps ethernet line.

      10GbE is still prohibitively expensive for most build-outs of wireless networks.

  • by Anonymous Coward
    If these numbers are even close to being accurate, that's some impressive speed. I remember not that long ago when the wireless connection was the bottleneck in my network. This blows my cable modem speed out of the water.
    • by TWX ( 665546 )
      Having tested my cablemodem speeds, I could still get away with 802.11g and not see any noticeable bottleneck at the wireless.
      • The 802.11g is only 54mbps my service gets about 80mbps during the peak hours when it's a little slower. I'm using 802.11n which is 600mpbs and have no problem streaming hd from the internet and my local media server to 3-4 devices at the same time.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    With the average broadband speed who needs this much headroom in Wifi? Maybe some plus to having less power consumption, and built in compatibility long term. But most won't ever be able to experience any difference over AC speeds or even some N speeds. This obsession that most people need or 1 Gbps wifi is not being honest with consumers. As if a continually increase in local network speed somehow results in better internet speed. I know plenty of consumers who bought a $200 router and complained it never

    • by msk ( 6205 )

      I'm still on 3Mbps DSL because I use a reseller who offers uncapped service.

      Until I can get faster speed, uncapped, for the same price, I'll stick with what I have.

    • Re:Who needs this? (Score:4, Insightful)

      by hipp5 ( 1635263 ) on Monday February 13, 2017 @11:14AM (#53856775)

      who needs this much headroom in Wifi?

      Local network? Transferring files from my wireless devices to my computer? Streaming from my devices to my TV?

      • by zifn4b ( 1040588 )

        Local network? Transferring files from my wireless devices to my computer? Streaming from my devices to my TV?

        Yes, this is true. 4K streaming content will become common place at some point then followed by 8K. This will probably happen because at some point you won't be able to buy a 1080p television and then eventually not even a 4K one but you didn't even mention some of the real challenges around WIFI that until recently we haven't even a made a dent in.

        Coverage area is a real problem for WIFI especially when you consider a 2000-3000 sq. ft. house let alone a 4000-5000 sq. ft. house. The conventional solution

        • If you can afford a 5,000 square foot home, you can afford the more advanced networking gear necessary to have wireless coverage in that same home.

          • by zifn4b ( 1040588 )

            If you can afford a 5,000 square foot home, you can afford the more advanced networking gear necessary to have wireless coverage in that same home.

            Fair enough but how many of those home owners actually possess the ability to set it up? Hire a business contractor to do that for them? Most people that I know that own that type of home aren't rich by any stretch of the imagination.

      • Wifi mesh back haul channels that don't reduce your 802.11ac channel capacities when you are too lazy to run that fucking capable through your crawlspace.

    • who needs this much headroom in Wifi?

      University campuses? Conference halls? Hotels? Youth hostels?

      (MU-MIMO is about increasing performance with multiple simultaneous clients, unlike plain MIMO, which only increases the throughput to a single client.)

    • Wireless HDMI. And maybe some future standard for PCIe and Thunderbolt over TCP/IP (the way we now have semi-standards for transporting USB, SCSI, and FireWire over TCP/IP (like almost every networked printserver appliance now sold).

      At some point, it probably WILL become cheaper & easier to transmit insanely fast data without wires. At least, if you have fiber to each room, feeding a 60GHz access point with 20 feet of cat6 doing 10-gig ethernet. At that point, the wireless network is basically short-ra

  • Yeah, if I buy a new router/access point AND a device that both have this new chip. My guess for most this will rather be later than soon.
  • How long before this tech or some other vendor's version of the same thing is widely available in under-$40 home WiFi routers, under-$20 USB sticks, and at about the same cost to build into phones and laptops as today's commonly-used WiFi chips?

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Probably never for USB sticks or built into phones etc. To get the full bandwidth you need 12 antennas it appears. Like 802.11AC, most devices will only be able to use a small fraction of the available bandwidth.

      That's probably for the best, we don't really want one laptop trying to transmit over the entire 2.4 and 5GHz spectrums at once. 2.4GHz is bad enough already, with existing wifi and Bluetooth. At least 5GHz has poor penetration.

      • by davidwr ( 791652 )

        Probably never for USB sticks or built into phones etc. To get the full bandwidth you need 12 antennas it appears

        I should've specified that I was accounting for this.

        To rephrase:

        How long before non-routers with "up to a 4x increase in throughput speed in a crowded network [and] 2x2 MU-MIMO" using the new .ax standard for under $20 on a USB stick (including antennas) or built-in to laptops and phones for about the same as currently-popular high-speed WiFi technology?

  • by Luthair ( 847766 ) on Monday February 13, 2017 @10:59AM (#53856609)
    hur hur
  • I suppose it boils down to something like die size or power consumption, but considering that a lot of smartphones can act as access points, why not provide all functionality in one chip?

    • Wattage on the radio, and antenna inputs.

      You don't need the capability to plug 8 antennae into your phone, but you may want that for an access point. Also, your phone would drain the battery if running with the wattage that a normal AP does, from either PoE or a wall wart.

  • Some of my cousins live in rural Iowa and are connected to Century link with ~500 kbit/sec Internet connections. Their computer can talk to their phones and vice versa really, really fast with this technology, but DSL connections will still be pretty slow. Their phones have relatively fast Internet connections but with the data speed caps for "unlimited" cell phone plans, cell phone connections to the Internet are not terribly useful for the things most families use the Internet for.
    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • There are a lot of good rural WISPs that can get you 10-50Mb easily, and more with additional work. If there isn't one in the area, start a co-op or get a WISP to expand coverage with a committed pool of customers.
  • Are they going to make a passive wifi chip or at least support ambient wifi ? Smartwatches badly need passive wifi chips (or passive bluetooth).

  • Sure, it's a start, but is bandwidth keeping pace with the bandwidth demands of slashdot reader's porn? VR takes twice as much bandwidth...

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