Wireless LAN (WLAN) throughput advancements introduced by the emerging IEEE 802.11n standard come at the price of unprecedented technological complexity. This creates an immediate need for ...
This is a commentary that I've wanted to craft for a long time. CES is the perfect venue to finally put my aspirations into action. I'll begin with a brief history lesson. Hang with me, there's a ...
The IEEE 802.11n standard is likely to be approved in September, making the high-speed wireless LAN technology official after about seven years of wrangling and refinement. The 802.11 working group, ...
As 802.11n slowly crawls toward becoming a wireless standard, IT managers have to decide whether it's the right time to switch. Unfortunately, the standard is stuck in draft status. Here's why. You ...
The process of finalizing the IEEE 802.11n specification is proving tricky, and the IEEE task group overseeing it is now saying that the final release probably won't happen until early 2008. The early ...
The performance improvements achieved via IEEE 802.11n stand to transform the WLAN user experience, and ratification of the amendment sets the stage for a new wave of application innovation and ...
* IEEE 802.11n wireless LAN draft fails to advance on initial vote * Trusted Computing Group demonstrates interoperability among vendors * Internap rolls out application assessment service * Full ...
After much debate and a lot of contention among the overall IEEE membership, the all-important IEEE 802.11n working group has given its stamp of approval to the next draft version of the specification ...
The IEEE 802.11n Working Group this week approved draft 2.0 of the standard, paving the way for 100+Mbps wireless LAN products as early as this summer. Just over 83 percent of working group members ...
The IEEE 802.11n standard is likely to be approved in September, making the high-speed wireless LAN technology official after about seven years of wrangling and refinement. The 802.11 working group, ...
Editor’s Note: This story is reprinted from NetworkWorld.com. The IEEE 802.11n Working Group this week approved draft 2.0 of the standard, paving the way for 100+Mbps wireless LAN products as early as ...
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