NETWORK WORLD NEWSLETTER: GIBBS & BRADNER
08/26/04

Dear [EMAIL PROTECTED],

In this issue:

* Net Insider columnist Scott Bradner takes a look at the High 
��Throughput Study Group (802.11n)
* Links related to Gibbs & Bradner
* Featured reader resource
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Today's focus:  Faster than you need is not fast enough

By Scott Bradner

There is something in a standards organization that abhors a 
limit. The latest example is the work underway in the IEEE 
802.11n project.

There is a lot of wrangling to go yet but the goals of the 
project are impressive enough. The High Throughput Study Group 
(802.11n) ( 
<http://grouper.ieee.org/groups/802/11/Reports/tgn_update.htm> ) 
was authorized by the IEEE about a year ago to define a new 
version of the wildly popular 802.11 wireless LAN standard that 
could run at twice (or more) the speed of the 54M bit/sec 
802.11a/g standards. (Also see the formation document for the 
study group 
<http://www.ieee802.org/11/Documents/DocumentHolder/2-798.zip>   
and the project criteria 
<http://www.ieee802.org/11/Documents/DocumentHolder/2-799.zip> )

The presentations to explain individual proposals for technology 
to meet the criteria were due mid-August. Last June more than 60 
people had indicated that they intended to make presentations 
about full or partial proposals, but I've not seen how many 
submitted presentations.

Two groups ( <http://www.nwfusion.com/news/2004/081604mimo.html> 
)seem to have decided that PR campaigns might help their chances 
when it comes to getting their proposals adopted. The first 
group, Task Group n, which is calling its proposal TGn Sync, 
includes Agere Systems, Atheros, Intel, Nokia, Philips and Sony. 
There is a white paper on the TGn Sync proposal ( 
<http://www.nwfusion.com/nlgibrad535> ). The other group calls 
its proposal WWiSE ( <http://www.wwise.org/> ), which stands for 
World-Wide Spectrum Efficiency. The WWiSE group includes Airgo, 
Bermai, Broadcom, Conexant, STMicro and Texas Instruments.

The name of the second proposal alludes to one of the 
differences between them - the WWiSE proposal uses 20-MHz 
channels, which are supported in all countries and the TGn Sync 
proposal uses 40-MHz channels, which are not supported in Japan 
but can back off to 20-MHz channels. Both proposals include 
modes that are compatible with 802.11a/b/g and other modes that 
support 500M bit/sec or faster data rates.

One hopes these two groups can work together, along with some 
subset of the other proposers, to come up with one standard 
within a reasonable time period.

The WWiSE group is taking an interesting tact by offering, with 
some specific conditions, to license the technology in their 
proposal royalty-free to companies implementing the resulting 
IEEE standard (assuming their proposal becomes the standard). 
This might look better than it is because these days it's 
unlikely that the members of any particular group will own or 
control all the patents that lawyers somewhere will apply to a 
standard. Just to make the intellectual property rights games 
more interesting, there is no reason to think that all the 
companies that might decide to assert patent rights in the 
future are currently participating in the IEEE discussions where 
they might have to disclose such patents or patent applications.

I'm sure that bandwidth-wasting applications will be developed 
(like the memory-wasting applications so popular for PCs these 
days) that will make use of the data rates that 802.11n will 
enable. But in the meantime, I can get the same vicarious thrill 
with wireless as I do now with my Gigabit Ethernet-equipped 
laptop plugged into my home Gigabit Ethernet LAN and connected 
to my rather non-gigabit cable modem.

I'm sure there are theoretical and practical limits to the data 
rates that can be teased out of this type of technology but, 
using history as a guide, I wouldn't want to bet on what the 
standards will include 10 years from now.

Disclaimer: Part of Harvard's job is the testing of perceived 
theoretical and practical limits on all sorts of things, but I 
didn't ask about this particular one, thus the above opinion is 
mine.
_______________________________________________________________
To contact: Scott Bradner

Bradner is a consultant with Harvard University's University 
Information Systems. He can be reached at <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 

_______________________________________________________________
This newsletter is sponsored by Alterpoint 

Read the latest analyst report on Network Change and 
Configuration Management (NCCM) written by EMA's Dennis 
Drogseth.  This report discusses the latest developments in the 
NCCM market, including an in-depth look at DeviceAuthority 
Suite, a comprehensive solution for configuring, changing, and 
controlling today's complex, multi-vendor IT network 
infrastructures.   Download the report today to learn how you 
can leverage NCCM to reduce the cost and complexity of managing 
network change. 
http://www.fattail.com/redir/redirect.asp?CID=73249
_______________________________________________________________
ARCHIVE LINKS

Gibbs archive:
http://www.nwfusion.com/columnists/gibbs.html

Bradner archive:
http://www.nwfusion.com/columnists/bradner.html
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