WLAN quality-of-service specification approved
IDG News Service - A specification that could improve voice and video on wireless LANs has received approval from the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc., ending a long standards-setting process but possibly setting the stage for more work on the problem.
The standards board of the full IEEE approved the 802.11e specification for publication in late September, according to Geri Mitchell-Brown, Wi-Fi strategist at SpectraLink Corp., a maker of voice over Wi-Fi systems. The standard is a set of technologies for prioritizing traffic and preventing packet collisions and delays, which should improve the experience of users making voice-over-IP (VoIP) calls and watching video over WLANs.
Mitchell-Brown said she expects vendors and the Wi-Fi Alliance to adopt specific elements of the standard as appropriate for common demands by users. The Wi-Fi Alliance has adopted a subset of the standard, called Wi-Fi Multimedia (WMM), which has already been adopted by several WLAN vendors.
On WLANs that are based on standard 802.11, all users share the network's capacity, and no packet gets priority over any other. This isn't usually a problem with typical data applications such as exchanging e-mail and browsing the Web, but with voice calls and streaming video, packets have to get across the network at the right time.
The 802.11e specification allows packets to gain priority by defining four traffic classes, each with its own queue. By default, they would be for voice, video, best-effort and background, said Ben Guderian, vice president for market strategies and industry relations at SpectraLink. The definitions of the four classes could be changed from the default. To identify the class of each packet, the standard uses markers similar to ones used in wired Ethernet, he added. Seeing those markers, an access point could give voice packets top priority for transmission, followed by video, and so on, he said.
That piece can be used with other mechanisms for preventing collisions between packets, Guderian added. Another key element of the standard is a way of timing communications with client devices that's intended to conserve battery life in handheld devices, he said.
The new standard is a good start, according to IDC analyst Abner Germanow.
"It's a fairly good standard for small wireless LAN deployments where you have a need to prioritize certain traffic types, but it may not be the right standard for doing QoS [quality of service] in large-scale enterprise environments," Germanow said.
The problem with 802.11e is that it puts the power to request priority in the client, Germanow said. As a result, he said, "anyone



- Excel 2010 Cheat Sheet
- Register for this Computerworld Insider Cheat Sheet and gain access to hundreds of premium content articles, guides, product reviews and more.
- Digital Transformation: Creating New Business Models Where Digital Meets Physical
- Individuals and businesses alike are embracing the digital revolution. Social networks and digital devices are being used to engage government, businesses and civil...
- Empowering Your Mobile Worker
- Today's most productive employees are mobile, and your company's IT strategy must be ready to support them with 24/7 access to the business...
- An Interactive Guide: Bring Your Own Device
- BYOD presents significant security and management challenges to IT departments who want to take advantage of the trend, but still protect corporate assets....
- Calculating ROI for Mobile Client Acceleration
- As mobile devices continue to expand in business use, ensuring these devices have optimal performance is becoming an IT imperative. This EMA paper...
- Tablet Computing Without Compromise
- This paper provides an overview of how and why that migration-from any old tablet to Windows tablets-came to be. All Mobile and Wireless White Papers
- Live Webcast
North Pole to South Seas: Overcoming the Pitfalls of remote Performance - In today's always-on world, connectivity is a business requirement. You need the tools that allow you to operate as if you were on...
- Supporting Mobile Productivity With A Limited IT Budget
- Join us and hear from Kaseya mobile IT management experts as we discuss core strategies for supporting the mobile revolution on a shoestring...
- North Pole to South Seas: Overcoming the Pitfalls of remote Performance
- In today's always-on world, connectivity is a business requirement. You need the tools that allow you to operate as if you were on...
- Unified Communications 101
- What's the best way to implement a unified communications solution for your organization?
- QNX® and BlackBerry® PlayBook™ Tablet.
- RIM's multi-processor, multi-tasking BlackBerry PlayBook runs a new Tablet OS powered by QNX, a bullet-proof microkernel operating system. This track will take a...
- A Close Look at Tablets
- Learn More All Mobile and Wireless Webcasts