New Wi-Fi standard will speed up video streaming

By John Boudreau
San Jose Mercury News

06/25/2012 - 1:47 PM EDT

http://business-news.thestreet.com/mercury-news/story/new-wi-fi-standard-will-speed-video-streaming-0/1


It wasn't long ago families squabbled over who was hogging the TV remote
control. Now they face off over who's hogging the bandwidth.

As the number of wireless devices increases in homes -- multiple TVs,
smartphones, tablets, laptops -- networks are getting bogged down.

But help is on the way.

A new Wi-Fi protocol -- dubbed 802.11ac -- will increase data speeds by as
much as three times over the most recent standard to 1.3 gigabytes per
second. It is also six times more power efficient and will provide faster
and more reliable Wi-Fi coverage throughout the home.

Broadcom is the first wireless chip manufacturer to come out with what it
is calling 5G Wi-Fi. While the new standard won't increase the speed of
data coming in through the so-called Internet pipes to the home -- such as
DSL or fiber optic cables -- it will enable people to view and stream video
already stored on, say, PCs or DVRs, much more quickly.

"If you are paying for 50 megabytes per second from AT&T, having a 5G Wi-Fi
router in your home doesn't change that," said Dino Bekis, Broadcom's
senior director for access and wireless entertainment. "What it does do is
allow you to share content between devices -- smartphones, smart TVs, etc.
-- much faster and more reliably than before."

The new standard underscores the surging demand for bandwidth to handle the
large amounts of video Americans are consuming every day. "Video use has
been growing exponentially," he said.

According to research by Cisco Systems(CSCO), one million minutes of video
content will race across networks every second by 2015, and the number of
gadgets connected to the Internet will be twice the world's population.
Between 2010 and 2015, mobile data traffic is expected to soar 26 times.

"The need to stream multiple videos simultaneously (in homes) is there,"
said Philip Solis, analyst with ABI Research. "There is a need for
802.11ac."

A number of manufacturers, including San Jose-based Netgear, are now
rolling out routers embedded with Broadcom's 5G Wi-Fi chips. And makers of
devices, from smartphones to laptops and smart TVs, will start embedding
the new chips in coming months. Taiwan computer maker Asus recently
launched the first laptop equipped with the new Wi-Fi protocol.

The new technology could add to the momentum of Americans turning away from
cable TV for their entertainment, said David Henry, Netgear vice president
of product management. "If folks are going to cut the cord, they need to be
able to stream multiple videos at the same time," he said.

The new Wi-Fi standard, which operates on the wider 5 GHz radio spectrum
provides more room to transfer data with less traffic, Bekis explained.
"Think about it as a brand new freeway opening up with no cars," he said.

It's a faster and more efficient way to move information, Bekis added. So
it would be like packing a bus that can move down the highway at the speed
of a Ferrari.

In the home, that would mean the kids can watch a video in the family room,
Dad can stream a movie from the DVR to his bedroom TV, and a visiting
cousin could transfer a vacation video from a tablet to another TV -- all
simultaneously, he explained.

Because the protocol is able to transfer data more quickly, and more
efficiently, it uses significantly less power, Bekis said. "For a given
amount of data, you can transmit it at one-sixth the power," he said.

The new protocol will make Wi-Fi signals faster and more reliable
throughout the home, which usually get weaker the further one is from the
router, said Netgear's Henry.

Routers sold with the new 5G Wi-Fi chip are expected to be compatible with
devices that don't have the new technology and operate on the more
congested 2.4 GHz radio spectrum.

"When you put this in your home, you won't notice anything different,"
Bekis said. But "as soon as you have a device that is embedded with 5G
Wi-Fi, you are immediately going to be able to transmit data at these
higher rates."
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