Difference between revisions of "The Increase in the speed of internet connection"
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==Enablers:== | ==Enablers:== |
Revision as of 09:54, 17 January 2010
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Enablers:
- Increasing attention of research on the 802.11 standard
- Increased support by major industry leaders - e.g. Intel, Apple
Inhibitors:
- Radio-frequency transmission difficulties to consider:
- Multi-path fading
- Signal to noise ratios
- Interference - electromagnetic and physical
- Usable transmission distance
- Regulatory limits on radio channels available
- Regulatory limits on power levels for transmission
- Error detection and correction mechanisms reduce usable payload size
- Security fears
Paradigms:
Emerging paradigms associated with the emergence of IEEE 802.11x
- Wi-Fi is the now standard name assosciated with 802.11x, and official WiFi Certification is now common
- Hotspots (areas of WiFi coverage) have appeared throughout the world, often as a result of wireless communities
- Wireless communities usually implement wide-area wireless networks to reduce cost/complexity in the 'last-mile'
- Wardriving is the activity of searching for Hotspots i.e. travelling and picking up transmissions
- Elektrosmog is being significantly contributed to by WiFi as it increases in popularity and as new standards employ multiple channels to increase speed
Experts:
- IEEE - http://www.ieee.org
- Intel - http://www.intel.org
Timing:
- Original IEEE 802.11 standard established in 1997 - 1Mbit/s and 2Mbit/s
- 802.11b amendment in 1999 - 11Mbit/s
- 802.11a also amended in 1999 but only really available in 2001, after 802.11b - 54Mbit/s at 5GHz
- 802.11g released in 2003 - 54Mbit/s at 2.4GHz
- 802.11n expected in March 2009 - will probably deliver 248 Mbit/s
- 802.11y 2008 54Mbit/s at 3.7Ghz
Web Resources:
- http://www.ieee802.org/11
- http://www.intel.com/personal/do_more/wireless/wifi.htm
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/802.11
To return to the home page of the Future of Communication clickThe_future_of_communication_in_2015