Yes, that sounds about right.

Taking a closer look at the properties of 802.11ad, maybe they need to make a 
“thin” device for each room with Ethernet.

Something like an in wall (1Gang) unit that has POE from the central location, 
a GigE Ethernet port and a thin 6’ flat cable with a small 60GHz array at the 
end that sticks on the wall.

Then you could get that antenna up higher for LOS in the room without using a 
ceiling AP?

From: Af [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Harold Bledsoe
Sent: Saturday, November 12, 2016 10:03 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] 802.11ad Deployment in a House

I think the idea is that 11ad will be opportunistic offload. For enterprise it 
makes a lot of sense because you have dense users and ceiling mounted APs.  For 
home it is a little more challenging because you would need one in each room 
that you want to "offload" to 60GHz.

The applications where 60ghz makes sense is where you would think seriously 
about using a wire (where you need high bandwidth, low latency - basically a 
wire experience).  Video streaming, gaming, that sort of stuff would be the 
low-hanging fruit.

-Hal

On Sat, Nov 12, 2016 at 8:06 AM Seth Mattinen 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
On 11/12/16 7:04 AM, Bill Prince wrote:
> I would think that 60 GHz "might" be useful if the AP and a UHD TV were
> in the same room, and your 2.4GHz and 5GHz channels were all trash
> because of close proximity of neighbors.
>
> But overall, I think it would be more trouble than most consumers can
> deal with.


I've been using a 60GHz HDMI bridge for several years between the AV
gear and the projector. Works great unless the cat sits on it because
it's warm.

~Seth

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