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News
Next-Generation Wi-Fi Is Coming Soon, but ABI Research
Advises, "Let the Buyer Beware" (17/5/2006)
The 802.11n Wi-Fi standard holds the promise
of enabling a new generation of networking applications including
multimedia distribution within the home and very high-speed data
connectivity. With a new draft 11n Draft Specification approved
in March 2006, chipset vendors and equipment makers are gearing
up for a new wave of market growth. However, according to a new
study from ABI Research, the road ahead is full of pitfalls, and
early adopters should heed the warning to "let the buyer beware"
until final ratification of the standard in 2007.
"The 11n Draft Specification was the starting
gun for 802.11 chipset vendors," says Alan Varghese, ABI Research's
principal analyst for wireless semiconductors. Varghese adds that
the leading chipset companies in the 802.11 standards such as Broadcom,
Atheros, Intel, Marvell, Texas Instruments, and Conexant will now
join incumbent Airgo Networks in a race to provide solutions for
this incipient market. Shipments of current-generation 802.11g ICs
have taken the world by storm, hitting 150 million units this year,
and manufacturers expect a much larger available market for 802.11n
given the broader set of consumer electronics and networking applications
that will be enabled by average data speeds of 150 Mbps and peak
speeds of 600 Mbps.
But though the Draft form has had consensus,
the specification still leaves many options open to interpretation
and implementation.
Will there be 11n Draft chipsets and devices
available in the market in 2006? According to Varghese, the answer
is yes. "But," he cautions, "there will be wide variability between
them, and true interoperability between vendors is still wishful
thinking. So consumers and business users should be wary about their
purchases, at least till final ratification of the standard, which
is expected sometime in 2007."
Some chipset vendors will focus on the high
performance segments of video and multimedia distribution; others
will offer solutions that are "good-enough" in performance but at
lower price points for segments such as data networking.
ABI Research's study, "Next-Generation Wi-Fi:
802.11n - Chipsets, Technologies, and Market Drivers" discusses
these issues in detail, examining vendor solutions, technology roadmaps,
and end-market demand for 802.11's next evolution in consumer and
business markets. It forms part of the firm's subscription Wi-Fi
Research Service, which also offers research reports, forecast databases,
ABI Insights and analyst inquiry time.
www.abiresearch.com
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