Wi-5: A new design strategy or just vapor-ware?
Last Post: August 27, 2018:
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The linked article below attempts to explain a "new enhancement" for Wi-Fi.
It's hard to tell if it really is something new and novel, or just smoke.
Would like to see some real technical details..
https://www.ecnmag.com/news/2018/08/coordinating-wi-fi-traffic
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I wonder what happened to the article. I only see the title, bunch of ads and zero comments (understandably).
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Very interesting.
Trying to find information on their search page gets HTML ERROR 500.
But I did find essentially, if not verbatim, the same article here
https://phys.org/news/2018-08-wi-fi-traffic.html
Changing the source, to something like phys.org, doesn't make it any more credible to me.
Hmm ?
Plagiarism fears ?
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Impossible to say without any substance. However, I doubt there is much to improve if it really "requires no modification to end-user devices" that the IEEE 802.11 group would have overlooked.
If the next standard (after 802.11ax) will be on 6MHz it will be a clean slate. No need for any backwards compatibility. There TDMA or some such could increase the efficiency multifold. 802.11ax resource units and their assignment is a step in that direction.
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The other day, during the CWNP webinar on /ax, it was said that /ax OFDMA will revert to OFDM with only a single client, so as not to lose efficiency (due to sharing). I hope it really works that way.
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I haven't thought through all the details of ax, but I imagined OFDMA could be beneficial also in single client / AP communication since it would provide for true full duplex communication.
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For a single user, I don't know if that will help.
ACK's still can't proceed until the original packet is decoded, at least up to the CRC.
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