On Monday, August 3, 2015 8:13pm, "David Lang" <[email protected]> said:
> 

> That requires central coordination of the stations. Something we don't have in
> wifi. Wifi lives and dies with 'listen for a gap, try transmitting, and if you
> collide, backoff a random period'


Central coordination is not the only form of coordination... there are 
perfectly fine decentralized coordination schemes that do better than LBT. 
Depends on your definition of 802.11, but I did point out that the MAC layer 
could be a lot better, and internode coordination can be both decentralized and 
far more power efficient, in principle. It's important to realize that the 
preparation of an OFDM modulated waveform can be pipelined, so that a 
transmitter can have the physical waveform "built" (via DFT, etc.) while 
waiting for its time to go.  And the "collision resolution" can and should be 
an arbitration process that starts before the current packet in the air is 
finished.

What prevents this is unnecessary "legacy compatibility" - making high speed 
modulated packets suffer because there are still stupid 2 Mb/sec. 802.11b 
devices on the 2.4 GHz band.  There are ways to coexist with legacy systems 
that are better than transmitting the prefix on the front of every packet (you 
can transmit a fake 802.11b prefix that will lock out the 2.4 GHz competitors 
for a period of time when many "turbo" stations occupy the air using better 
cooperating physical layer methods, as a conceptually trivial example).
 
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