U.S. now allows full-5GHz Wi-Fi networking
Last Post: October 26, 2006:
-
Just to let you know, we're HUGE fan of Ascom. If you've not worked with them yet please look into them. Here's the highlights:
+ 802.11g (all other clients are currently 802.11b)
+ rugged (Ascom is owned by Ericsson, who knows a thing or two about making cell phones)
+ can be wiped down using chemicals (think hospitals)
+ messaging, messaging, messaging
I've done some analysis w/ these phones looking at frames/sec and datarates/size of each frame and codecs. I see roughly 75 frames per sec and the frame size ranging from 150 - 350 bytes for G.729 and G.711 respectively. That's for one phone, so two phones you'd double that, etc. What I like about the 802.11g capability, if you design/control your network right and have enough link margin you can maintain high phy rates and therefore have *significantly* shorter Tx times for each frame vs. an 802.11b network. Therefore, a lot more phones per cell. Also, a lot more forgiveness for retransmissions w/out noticing any drop in call quality.
To your point above, doing a voice-grade WLAN we try to be really careful about using antennas to try to limit hidden node. Think about hidden node at 75fps!!
- 1