Enough power for Hall effect thrust?Will it be enough power to shove Carr as far away as possible?
FCC Chairman Brendan Carr attributed the FCC’s planned action to President Trump in a press release titled, “President Trump Unleashes American Innovation With 6 GHz Win.”
What we need for better WiFi in apartment blocks is more power.Ugh, great. The 5GHz band is already a clusterfuck in any populated area for outdoor links, now I can look forward to the 6GHz band being similarly unusable.
I think this is just for outdoor devices which will still be limited to lower power than indoor devices. I wouldn't expect this to have a huge effect on congestion since your average urban apartment dweller probably isn't installing outdoors APs. Conversely if you have a large property, higher power means larger coverage.Why is the Wi-Fi hardware industry advocating for higher power? That would make the performance of existing devices go down due to higher interference, and also require fewer devices for equivalent coverage, meaning fewer devices to sell and lower profits. Why would they view this as an advantage?
Because not all of us are somewhere where interference exists. Range in my house with century old plaster walls on the other hand is less than 5 meters in those higher frequencies. And around 10 in the lower ones. Limiting power based on number of other foreign networks seen does seem like a useful feature in future specs though.Why is the Wi-Fi hardware industry advocating for higher power? That would make the performance of existing devices go down due to higher interference, and also require fewer devices for equivalent coverage, meaning fewer devices to sell and lower profits. Why would they view this as an advantage?
What we need for better WiFi in apartment blocks is more power.
That helps if I need to connect to a wireless router from a few blocks away to steal bandwidth. Oh, and it makes my phone battery drain faster too.
Are VR/AR head sets really suffering with today's Wi-Fi6/7? How much bandwidth do they really need?
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Anything FCC Chairman Brendan Carr says, to be honest, I am suspicious of.
I know that is not wise of me...but it is how I feel right now.
I fear for my country and its present, as well as its future.
Cranking up the power of access points does nothing to improve their ability to receive a signal and adds reflections. Cranking up power in buildings with metal or rock/plaster walls creates a ton of locations (pockets) where there is a strong signal but poor or even non-existing throughput where beacon signals from APs have bounced in but devices are unable to reach the AP back out to be heard. And even if cranking power were, somehow, a solution, it still doesn't answer my question about this is beneficial to the manufacturers. No one cares about the end users.Because not all of us are somewhere where interference exists. Range in my house with century old plaster walls on the other hand is less than 5 meters in those higher frequencies. And around 10 in the lower ones. Limiting power based on number of other foreign networks seen does seem like a useful feature in future specs though.
... Unleashes American Innovation With 6 GHz Win ...
For their basic functions on a stand alone device - to translate the view to someone who is watching on a monitor or something, WiFi6 is more than enough.Are VR/AR head sets really suffering with today's Wi-Fi6/7? How much bandwidth do they really need?
See aboveConsidering monitors literally use 40+ gbps of bandwidth over hdmi 2.1/DisplayPort equivalent to support 4k/120hz and etc...
Yes, wifi 7 and it's max theoretical bandwidth of 46 gbps (with all 3 bands and minimal interference) is a limiting factor whe the higher end VR/AR does like 3k per eye at 90-120 hz....
This is what I was hoping the article would address— what will this mean for WiFi network congestion? The 2.4 and 5Ghz ranges are already cluttered AF, and a “loudness war” of higher power devices sounds prefect for making the 6Ghz spectrum just as bad.Ugh, great. The 5GHz band is already a clusterfuck in any populated area for outdoor links, now I can look forward to the 6GHz band being similarly unusable.
Don't forget, 5G gave you COVID. Hopefully they've fixed that part in the 6G rollout.The moment Republicans are no longer in power, I anticipate the concerns about “6G cancer/allergy/alien waves” to suddenly get put on the plate again.
They don't have to wait until they're out of power. Remember "Who negotiated this idiotic trade agreement with Canada?!? We're gonna tariff them until they negotiate a new deal with us! That last deal was made by a moron!"The moment Republicans are no longer in power, I anticipate the concerns about “6G cancer/allergy/alien waves” to suddenly get put on the plate again.
Sorry to tell you, there's no version of Nest (or AFAIK, any thermostat / smarthome stuff at all) that uses 6GHz. A lot of it doesn't even do 5GHz, 2.4-only isn't totally unheard of.Turning off everything but the 6 GHz antenna fixed that but then I had to turn the 5 GHz antenna back on to let the Nest connect to wifi (the Nest came with the apartment so out of my control to update to one that can use 6 GHz).
Sorry to tell you, there's no version of Nest (or AFAIK, any thermostat / smarthome stuff at all) that uses 6GHz. A lot of it doesn't even do 5GHz, 2.4-only isn't totally unheard of.
Is 6GHz really good for anything other than point to point or close proximity?
I keep hoping that LoRa will make it into commercial offerings -- imagine being able to text someone without the need to connect to a cell provider at all!
If the Verizon router lets you do a guest network, just do that for the nest then do only 6 ghz for your main network.It's on my to-do list to buy a new router because the one Verizon gave me with my FiOS subscription has TOO strong a signal and doesn't seem to have a way to turn it down in the settings—it reaches out too far into the hall even with the door closed and then my cell phone won't let go of the signal even when it's not really working. Turning off everything but the 6 GHz antenna fixed that but then I had to turn the 5 GHz antenna back on to let the Nest connect to wifi (the Nest came with the apartment so out of my control to update to one that can use 6 GHz).
Covid are for weak people, not the steak-eating, beer-chugging, gun-shooting patriots.I do not think magas will like this. Didn't 5g cause covid? I doubt they care for good wifi signals. Just used to spy on them, you know. Nope this one they will put immediately in the did not happen bin.