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Subject: [IP] Wider-Fi
------ Forwarded Message
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Wider-Fi
- Apr 14, 2003 12:00 AM (Forbes.com)
A little-known standard called Wi-Fi turned into the
hottest technology of the year and shook the wireless industry
to its core. Now its successors hope to leave Wi-Fi in the
dust.
That sound you hear, that incessant tapping on laptops at
the corner cafe, the local park and the airport lounge, is
music to the ears of the beleaguered tech industry. Wi-Fi, the
magical wireless link that lets all those tappers blast data
short distances at 200 times the speed of a dial-up modem for
no extra cost, has turned into the only bright note punctuating
Silicon Valley's indigo mood. Only three years old, Wi-Fi, a
once-obscure wireless standard with the ungainly real name of
IEEE 802.11, went supernova last year, selling 18 million
connections--one of the fastest adoption rates of any consumer
technology in history. Tens of thousands of Wi-Fi "hotspots"
have sprouted around the country. Some McDonald's now offer a
free link with the purchase of a combo meal. In March Intel
kicked off a $300 million-plus marketing blitz for a new brand,
Centrino, that packages together a new laptop microprocessor
with a Wi-Fi receiver.
Now it looks like history may repeat itself. In January the
industry group that spawned Wi-Fi released a new standard that
may put the old one to shame. It extends the wireless range of
Wi-Fi from roughly 300 feet to several miles and lets signals
bounce around obstacles and penetrate walls; it also fixes
security flaws and adds high-quality phone calls. This new
standard is dubbed 802.16a by the Institute of Electrical
& Electronics Engineers , which disdains catchy names.
Some are calling it Wi-Max, but a better tag might be Wider-Fi.
Meanwhile, a rival group at IEEE is working on 802.20--a kind
of Mobile-Fi that promises speedy links in cars and trains
traveling at speeds that can exceed 120 miles an hour.
...
- http://finance.lycos.com/home/news/story.asp?story=32622361
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