just thought id forward along a pretty good wifi 2003 year in review ...
happy new year everyone ...

- jon

----- Original Message -----
From: "Wi-Fi Networking News" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Wednesday, December 31, 2003 3:14 PM
Subject: [Wi-Fi Net News] 2003 in Review


> [ Permanent archived item: <http://wifinetnews.com/archives/002729.html> ]
>
> The yearly round-up: You'll see long reviews of 2003 elsewhere, so I'll be
succinct. What happened this year?
>
> * 802.11g was approved and caught on like wildfire. Despite concerns of
pre-ratification release of wonky G devices, it sold hundreds of thousands
of units, and firmly put 802.11a into the back seat -- into the trunk,
really. Late in 2003, Broadcom's claims (verified in part by [1] Tim
Higgins) that Atheros's Super G mode interferes with Broadcom's 802.11g
chipsets coupled with the Wi-Fi Alliance's admission that 25 percent of
Wi-Fi devices fail their certification test the first time around could make
compatibility and interoperability the number one issue in 2004.
>
> * WPA appears. Wi-Fi Protected Access solves security problems, but
manufacturers and the Wi-Fi Alliance are still lagging about six months
after it started to appear in certified devices in making firmware upgrades
available for older equipment and making the whole WPA package appealing,
compatible, and simple across different devices -- even those by the same
manufacturer. Apple's AirPort Extreme update and Linksys's WRT54G update are
good examples: you can only use new, G devices locked in WPA mode with these
units, and neither interface has the same options or parameters as the
other.
>
> * 5 GHz expands. With 255 MHz more bandwidth and international
harmonization, the 5 GHz band is poised to take off as WiMax (a
formalization of part of 802.16a) becomes the way to offer point-to-point
broadband and backhaul.
>
> * Bridging becomes cheap. More and more devices offer inexpensive
WDS-based bridging for expanding consumer and corporate networks.
>
> * WLAN switches proliferate. Too many makers, too many overlapping
features, too many big companies that aren't in the space yet. Who will be
left standing even with the piles of venture capital that flooded this
space? Possibly, whoever Cisco buys in 2004.
>
> * Hotspot market continues to fail to mature. Despite all the predictions
and all the build-out plans, the hotspot market continues to struggle to
reach the kind of ubiquity that would justify travelers spending $20 to $40
per month for unlimited access. T-Mobile's end-of-the-year partnership with
iPass probably marks the real turning point for business traveler access
because of iPass's blue-chip portfolio of companies.
>
> * Cell data starts to break 100 Kbps. 3G may not be widespread, but tests
in Washington DC and San Diego became deployments, offering over 200 Kbps in
real-world tests. Meanwhile, AT&amp;T Wireless becomes the first nationwide
EDGE deployer, which can offer over 100 Kbps in the best circumstances, but
almost always well outpaces GPRS, 1xRTT, and dial-up "56K" modems.
>
> What will 2004 bring? More security, higher cell data rates, and the final
blossoming of hotspots in public spaces.
>
> URLs referenced:
> [1] <http://www.smallnetbuilder.com>
>
> --by Glenn Fleishman
>
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> Copyright 2003 Glenn Fleishman. All rights reserved. Linking is
encouraged.
> Unsolicited Pundit, 115 N. 85th St., Suite 205, Seattle, WA 98103
>

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