By
Matthew Broersma
Tuesday, October 18 2005 01:43 PM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/insight/communications/0,39044835,39280388,00.htm
New technology promises to increase the speed of wireless
networks by a factor of 20, but the emerging standard is being delayed by
squabbling vendors.
A major upgrade has arrived for Wi-Fi that massively boosts
speed and range while all but doing away with interference problems. The
technology is called MIMO, and is already making its way into homes and small businesses.
The technology, which uses multiple antennas to achieve
dramatic performance gains, is already available. Chipmaker Airgo, for one, is
currently working on its fourth-generation products with Cisco's Linksys
subsidiary; Belkin and Buffalo all use Airgo's technology. Samsung is also
planning to use Airgo's chips in its laptops.
Many experts believe that MIMO is the future of the wireless
LAN. "The first wave, 802.11b, 11a and 11g, improved modulation," explains Leif-Olaf Wallin, an analyst with
research firm Gartner. "The next step is to make the antenna smarter."
But while MIMO has the potential to become move Wi-Fi
forward it is not yet standardised, with several different, incompatible
implementations of it being shipped by rival chipmakers including Intel, which
is used to getting its own way. The issues facing MIMO are very similar to the
situation with the 802.11g standard in the last few months before the standard
was finalised, with vendors shipping gear promised to be compatible with
approved kit. But this time around, instead of being a few months off, the
standard in question--802.11n--is about two years away, and a draft hasn't
even been agreed on yet.
"People have a tendency to buy whatever's the
latest thing."
--Ken Dulaney, Gartner analyst
The standards issue surrounding MIMO has led some industry
analysts to issue a warning to enterprises and even the general public to steer
clear of the technology for the time being. But so far, consumers and small
businesses, at least, don't seem to be listening. Blistering performance gains
are one reason--Wi-Fi gear with MIMO added on can make networks run at four
times the speed of standard 802.11a/g networks, and 20 times that of older
802.11b networks.
But despite the standards problems, a lot of companies are
choosing to invest in proprietary MIMO WLANs for the very simple reason that the
technology is available now. "People have a tendency to buy whatever's the
latest thing," says Gartner analyst Ken Dulaney.
Manufacturers say large enterprises are also getting on
board. Airgo is targeting big business and promising to reveal an enterprise-grade
licensee this year. The company says larger companies are "very open" to the
technology, now that a number of competing chipmakers have jumped aboard the
MIMO bandwagon. Trapeze Networks says it will begin selling MIMO Wi-Fi products
to enterprises for specialised applications such as wireless
videoconferencing.
How it works
MIMO's main benefits are
all to do with using its multiple antennas--which can be internal or external--to process signals.
One of these techniques, used by most MIMO chips, is the
ability to resolve multiple signal paths, known more technically as multipath
signals. These are the echoes and fragments of signals that arrive after the
main line-of-sight signal, such as the reflections off of buildings in a
built-up environment. Traditional 802.11 gear sees these signals as distortion,
but MIMO is able to use them to reinforce the main signal. That means clearer
signals, longer-range signals or a bit of both.
A related feature, pioneered by Airgo, is spatial division multiplexing (SDM), which transmits multiple independent data streams within a
single channel of bandwidth. This can increase throughput as the number of data
streams is increased. Multipath processing can work with a conventional
transmitter at the other end, but spatial multiplexing requires an antenna pair
at each end of the transmission for each data stream--in other words, it won't
give any benefits unless MIMO hardware is in use on both ends of the signal.
MIMO antennas each need dedicated processing hardware, which
means manufacturing costs are unavoidably higher than current standard Wi-Fi kit.
Routers from Linksys and Belkin are currently using Airgo's
True MIMO technology, with multipath and spatial multiplexing. The RangeMax
Wireless Router from Netgear uses BeamFlex from Ruckus Wireless, formerly known
as Video54. This MIMO variant has seven antennas and uses a technique called
beamforming instead of spatial multiplexing.
Beamforming transmits multiple identical data streams,
instead of independent streams, but the results are similar. D-Link's Super-G
with MIMO wireless router uses a four-antenna
Atheros Communications chipset,
which also uses beamforming instead of spatial multiplexing.
MIMO hardware generally shows only slight performance or range gains if the MIMO router is used with the conventional
Wi-Fi hardware found in most laptops. This is one of the points against it with
enterprises--to take full advantage of MIMO, companies would have to write off
their built-in 802.11a/g client devices and buy MIMO-enabled laptop cards.
In return they should get significantly better range and
throughput: the upcoming MIMO-based 802.11n standard is designed for theoretical
throughput of over 200Mbps and a real-world throughput of at least 100Mbps.
802.11a/g theoretically runs at 54Mbps with real throughput at 25Mbps; 802.11b
only realistically handles 5Mbps.
In September, Airgo began sampling a third-generation MIMO
chip it says already meets these speed goals. The True MIMO Gen3 chip, which
will be shipping in routers, laptops and other devices early next year, has a
theoretical data rate of up to 240Mbps and actual throughput of over 120Mbps,
says Airgo--faster than most wired Ethernet networks.
Such speeds might sound excessive, but they're needed for
particular applications--particularly in the home, to start off with at least.
"This is critical for video and consumer electronics, which need the higher
throughput for HDTV or high-definition video," says Philip Solis, analyst with
ABI Research. "This can also help link up the whole home, where signals
typically have to go through multiple walls."
The equipment will also make it easier for users to run
multiple services like Internet telephony and video transfer all at the same
time. Industry observers believe this level of wireless connectivity will pave
the way for new types of enterprise applications as well.
The lack of a standard doesn't worry manufacturers. "There's
nothing to lose by shipping the MIMO products before 802.11n," said Airgo chief
execuitve Greg Raleigh in a recent report, adding enterprises are "very open" to
MIMO today.
Gateway has begun redesigning its notebooks to accommodate
the additional antennas required by MIMO chipsets. Samsung is further along--in
June the company said it would use Airgo's chipsets in upcoming versions of its
X20 and X25 notebooks, instead of the Centrino chip bundle from Intel. Intel,
for its part, recently outlined plans for incorporating MIMO into a future Centrino version.
Analysts say the zeal of hardware vendors is understandable,
with such a huge market at stake. "When 802.11g products came along, market share shifted among Wi-Fi semiconductor companies. Those who came in faster with products got an early lead in the market," says Philip
Solis, analyst with ABI Research. "802.11n will be almost like a new starting
point. New players have everything to gain, and companies with the most market
share now have everything to lose."
Political skullduggery
Nevertheless, many in the
industry see proprietary MIMO add-ons as little more than a con. "We are seeing
vendors try to cheat the public by releasing products early," says Gartner's
Dulaney. "The specification needs to be approved, and the products need to go
through the testing process before it's delivered to the market. People really
want interoperability."
Many people will find themselves paying extra for technology
they don't need and in many cases won't work properly, Dulaney says. "Few people
even use 802.11b to its full extent. A 10Mbpswireless LAN is fine," he says.
"But if there's an 802.11a client around, it will drop back to a, and they won't
even know it. People don't have spectrum analysers. They'll have the wool pulled
over their eyes."
Something similar happened with 802.11g equipment in the
home, Dulaney notes--the equipment could be dragged down to a fraction of its
intended speed by a neighbours' 802.11b equipment. "In the long term, sure, we
always need more bandwidth, but we're telling people not to worry about it for
four or five years," Dulaney says.
Complicating matters further is that while the manufacturers
are aggressively pushing their proprietary hardware, the standard is looking
further and further away.
The IEEE formed the 802.11n Task Group (TGn) in January of
2004, and initially it didn't look as though finding common ground amongst the
different proposals would be difficult, since they were all relatively similar.
At that stage, the process was expected to be completed in late 2006.
A deadlock developed between the WWiSE (World-Wide Spectrum
Efficiency) group, backed by Broadcom and Airgo, and TGn Sync, backed by Intel
and Philips. In July the two groups said they'd work together with the third
major group, MITMOT, on a joint proposal. The compromise raised hopes that a
joint draft could be presented in November, with a final draft set for January.
The skulduggery hasn't stopped there, however, with a group
of the biggest WLAN chipmakers--Intel, Broadcom, Atheros and Marvell--reportedly collaborating outside TGn on key interoperability aspects of the specification, which they plan to present to the IEEE by
November. Marvell went on record defending the meetings, which have riled some
on the official task force--notably Airgo--and even raised antitrust concerns.
Intel and friends upped the ante against Airgo last week
when they formed a group called the Enhanced Wireless
Consortium (EWC). Led by Intel, Broadcom, Marvell and Atheros, the group is
the latest example of a long tradition in tech: The big guys, one way or
another, usually end up calling the shots on standards.
The latest developments may be an attempt by the big,
established chipmakers to keep Airgo-style spatial multiplexing from being an
important part of the final standard, says analyst Solis. The turmoil may mean
that a joint proposal won't arrive until January or later, which could push back
the finished standard by months, well into 2007.
"It is a highly political game, it is about the positioning
of the various vendors," says Gartner analyst Wollen. "Not all the vendors in
the standardisation process have an interest in it going too quickly, since it
could eat away at their current market."
If the standard arrives in 2007, big enterprise players such
as Cisco won't get on board until around 2008, Wollen estimates: "We don't
foresee 11n penetrating into the enterprise before 2010."