The
Institute of
Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) has finally voted to accept the
proposed next-generation
802.11n
Wi-Fi standard developed by the
Enhanced
Wireless Consortium.
The proposed 802.11n standard will enable higher performance wireless local
area networking, supporting speeds of up to 600Mbps with greater range than
existing Wi-Fi technologies.
Two US vendors,
Broadcom and
Marvell, were both quick
off the mark on the same day, claiming to be first to market with a compatible
product.
Broadcom announced the availability and sampling of its Intensi-fi family of
Wi-Fi chipsets which comply with, and incorporate all mandatory elements of, the
IEEE 802.11n draft specification.
Broadcom's offering is designed to be software upgradeable once the standard
is finalised, the company said.
To this end, Broadcom will continue to participate in the standards process
through ratification, ensuring that its solutions comply with the final 802.11n
specification.
Rival vendor Marvell, meanwhile, claims that its 88W836X chipset family,
first unveiled in October 2005, complies 100 per cent with the IEEE 802.11n
draft specification.
Reference designs based on the 88W836X family are currently being used by
OEMs and ODMs, the company said.
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