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Wi-Fi bandwidth breakthroughs leave consumers behind

March 16, 2004 12:00 PM ET

IDG News Service - As the market for wireless networking products continues to grow, vendors are constantly one-upping one another with performance claims for their products. However, it's a moot point to millions of U.S. and European home users stuck with Internet connection speeds far below the bandwidth promised by new 802.11g products.
Cisco Systems Inc.'s Linksys Group Inc. unit on Monday announced a new wireless router using Broadcom Corp.'s chip set technology that promises to improve the real-world performance that most home users experience using 802.11g wireless networks. The same day, Broadcom rival Atheros Communications Inc. unveiled a software update that will improve the bandwidth of 802.11g products based on its chips.
Wireless networking standards, such as 802.11g, are marketed with a maximum throughput figure that typical home users fall well short of under normal conditions. For 802.11g, the standard is capable of connecting wireless devices at up to 54Mbit/sec., but most users see about 20Mbit/sec. to 25Mbit/sec., depending on the layout of their homes or the materials used in the walls and floors.
Linksys' new Wireless-G Broadband Router with SpeedBooster is said to improve real-world network performance by up to 35%, the Irvine, Calif.-based company claimed in a press release. It costs $129.99 and will be available in April. Linksys also released Monday plug-in cards with the SpeedBooster technology for both desktop and notebook PCs that cost $99.99.
In tests conducted by the company and independent organizations, a wireless network using the new router and new plug-in cards was able to produce bandwidth of about 34M bit/sec., said Mike Wagner, director of marketing at Linksys. The company saw an increase in performance of about 20% when only one of the new products was used on a wireless network, he said.
Users of wireless products based on Atheros' Super G technology can now download a software update that allows their networks to toggle between two wireless performance modes that offer up to 40Mbit/sec. or 60Mbit/sec. of bandwidth, said Colin Mcnabb, vice president of marketing and business development at the Sunnyvale, Calif.-based company. The 60Mbit/sec. mode, known as Dynamic Turbo, uses a controversial technique called channel bonding that Broadcom and some independent testers claim impedes the performance of neighboring wireless networks based on other technology.

The new software allows an Atheros chip set to scan other wireless channels for traffic and make a decision to enable the channel-bonding mode based on the levels of traffic present on those networks, Mcnabb said. This was a planned software update to hardware introduced last year and wasn't


Reprinted with permission from

IDG.net
Story copyright 2009 International Data Group. All rights reserved.

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