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Thursday, Feb 28, 2008 

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Wireless ways for high-speed file swaps 

New wireless personal networks promise ultra-fast data exchange over short 
distances 

Illustration: NICTA 
 
Gigabit wireless: The Gi-Fi integrated wireless transceiver chip developed at 
the National ICT Research Centre, Australia. - 

Move over Wi-Fi, Gi-Fi is here! They are not putting it quite that way, but 
recent developments hold out the hope that very large video and other files,
can be swapped within seconds, by wireless devices operating over a few metres, 
in largely unused and unlicensed higher frequency bands.

First tangible evidence 

The first tangible evidence that Gi-Fi (the 'Gi' is for gigabit data rates) 
might be more than just a neat new acronym, came from Australia last week. 
Researchers
at the Victoria Research Laboratory of National Information and Communication 
Technology Australia Ltd (NICTA), announced that they had developed the world's
first transmitter-receiver integrated on a single chip, operating at 60 GHz and 
fabricated using the complementary metal oxide semiconductor (CMOS) process.
(http://nicta.com.au/news/current )

The chip, just 5 mm per side, has a tiny 1 mm antenna and uses the 60 GHz 
'millimetre-wave' spectrum - an unlicensed band of 7 GHz between 57 GHZ and 
64GHz.
NICTA's CEO David Skellern says the technology will allow the wireless transfer 
of audio and video files at rates up to 5 gigabits per second. almost ten
times faster than what is currently possible. And the fabrication which uses a 
130 nanometre CMOS process, may lead eventually to chips priced as low as
$10.

There are a number of firsts here: One, developing high frequency radio 
components in a standard CMOS process rather than in silicon seems to be a major
achievement. If the process can be scaled up, it holds out the possibility of 
low cost, low power chips which are also very high broadband. 

To get a feel for the scale of achievement, consider the best we can achieve 
with today's incumbent wireless technologies, Wi-Fi ,Wi-MAX or Bluetooth. 

WiFi (WLAN, 802.11) operates in the 2.4 GHz band, has transfer rates of between 
11 MBPS and 55 MBPS. WiMAX ( 802.16WiMAX) operates in the 2-11 GHz band
and achieves data rates of up to 70 MBPS. Bluetooth (802.15Bluetooth) whose 
operational ranges are comparable to what can be achieved by the Australian
Gi-Fi chip, is typically capable of 20 KBPS to 200 KBPS and in its fastest 
version, peaks at 55 MBPS. Second, this is one of the first practical 
applications
in the band of what is being known as mw-WPAN, that is, millimeter wave 
Wireless Personal Area Network. or 802.15.3 to give it the correct designation.
An IEEE Task Group no. 3C was formed in 2005 to develop this new WPAN 
alternative which promises to harness a relatively uncrowded, unlicensed band 
while
offering the hope of data rates of at least 1 GBPS and typically 2 GBPS or 
better. (see entries for Task Group 3C at 
http://www.ieee802.org/15/
 for technical details and future roadmap).

The potential of mw-WPAN for ultra fast data exchange has prompted companies 
like Intel, LG, Matsushita (Panasonic), NEC, Samsung, SiBEAM, Sony and Toshiba
to form WirelessHD, an industry-led effort to define a specification for the 
next generation wireless digital network interface for consumer electronics
products. Specifically, WirelessHD has a stated goal of enabling wireless 
connectivity for streaming high-definition content between source devices and
high-definition displays. ( see 
http://www.wirelesshd.org ). 

In fact the NICTA effort, says its Gigabit Wireless Project leader Prof Stan 
Skafidas, has been supported by key industry players like IBM, Synopsys, 
Cadence,
Anritsu, Aglent, Microsoft and SUSS MicroTec, so clearly there is industry 
interest in exploiting any technology that might boost data rates and drop 
product
costs, ten fold. an enticing possibility.

Usable prototypes 

In an indoor environment, the NICTA Gi-Fi device ( usable prototypes may be 
less than a year away) is expected to work over a distance of up to 10 metres.
which puts it somewhere between Bluetooth and WiFi, range-wise. What will it do 
for you and me? Consumers could typically download a high definition movie
from a kiosk in a matter of seconds to a music player or smart phone and having 
got home, could play it on a home theatre system or store it on a home
server for future viewing, again within a few seconds.

Maybe, it's not that premature to say, "WiFi, it's time to move over, the 
competition is here!"

ANAND PARTHASARATHY 
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