Wi-Fi 8 won't be faster, but will be better - more details emerge just hours after Wi-Fi 7 protocols are officially ratified
-
This post did not contain any content.
Wi-Fi 8 wants to replace your Ethernet cable by doing what no wireless standard has ever tried before
Sharp shift from simply fast to fail-safe
TechRadar (www.techradar.com)
-
This post did not contain any content.
Wi-Fi 8 wants to replace your Ethernet cable by doing what no wireless standard has ever tried before
Sharp shift from simply fast to fail-safe
TechRadar (www.techradar.com)
As long as I can use as an radar/lidar that can see through walls, as promised.
-
As long as I can use as an radar/lidar that can see through walls, as promised.
Why do you want people to see through your walls?
-
Why do you want people to see through your walls?
“If you’re not doing anything wrong, you shouldn’t fear the wifi penetration.”
-
This post did not contain any content.
Wi-Fi 8 wants to replace your Ethernet cable by doing what no wireless standard has ever tried before
Sharp shift from simply fast to fail-safe
TechRadar (www.techradar.com)
Second is the rise of AI-powered systems that depend on fast, reliable access to edge or cloud-based intelligence.
I’m sorry… what?
Is that just word salad? I’m not seeing “AI” as being anything but an excuse there. On the cloud side, AI involves server farms with physical interconnects. Same for endpoint AI, and edge server AI.
Are they saying that accessing these systems depends on fast, reliable access? Like, faster and more reliable than using Google from your web browser over the past 20 years?
The whole point of ML systems is that all the heavy compute and speed dependent stuff happens somewhere with dedicated bandwidth to handle it, and the interface can be slower and lossier because the service can take more steps without guidance.
-
Second is the rise of AI-powered systems that depend on fast, reliable access to edge or cloud-based intelligence.
I’m sorry… what?
Is that just word salad? I’m not seeing “AI” as being anything but an excuse there. On the cloud side, AI involves server farms with physical interconnects. Same for endpoint AI, and edge server AI.
Are they saying that accessing these systems depends on fast, reliable access? Like, faster and more reliable than using Google from your web browser over the past 20 years?
The whole point of ML systems is that all the heavy compute and speed dependent stuff happens somewhere with dedicated bandwidth to handle it, and the interface can be slower and lossier because the service can take more steps without guidance.
AI is currently a clustered mess of retry back off loops. The connectivity ain’t the issue.
-
“If you’re not doing anything wrong, you shouldn’t fear the wifi penetration.”
I think we’re just all excited to be penetrated.
-
This post did not contain any content.
Wi-Fi 8 wants to replace your Ethernet cable by doing what no wireless standard has ever tried before
Sharp shift from simply fast to fail-safe
TechRadar (www.techradar.com)
I want to see a seamless roaming standard so a grandma can buy a random brand's wifi extender, plug it in, connect it to her ISP router's wifi and have the same ssid through the house. No needing to jump to NANA-SWIFI-EXT.
-
Second is the rise of AI-powered systems that depend on fast, reliable access to edge or cloud-based intelligence.
I’m sorry… what?
Is that just word salad? I’m not seeing “AI” as being anything but an excuse there. On the cloud side, AI involves server farms with physical interconnects. Same for endpoint AI, and edge server AI.
Are they saying that accessing these systems depends on fast, reliable access? Like, faster and more reliable than using Google from your web browser over the past 20 years?
The whole point of ML systems is that all the heavy compute and speed dependent stuff happens somewhere with dedicated bandwidth to handle it, and the interface can be slower and lossier because the service can take more steps without guidance.
As a software developer, when I read that sentence, I head "We want WiFi 8 to continue to improve the standard and be faster, but that's not a very sexy sales pitch, so we're gonna pitch it as if AI is the only reason we're developing better infrastructure."
-
I want to see a seamless roaming standard so a grandma can buy a random brand's wifi extender, plug it in, connect it to her ISP router's wifi and have the same ssid through the house. No needing to jump to NANA-SWIFI-EXT.
You forgot about NANA-SWIFI-EXT-5G and NANA-SWIFI-EXT-6G
-
You forgot about NANA-SWIFI-EXT-5G and NANA-SWIFI-EXT-6G
Ugh, how could I forget?
-
Second is the rise of AI-powered systems that depend on fast, reliable access to edge or cloud-based intelligence.
I’m sorry… what?
Is that just word salad? I’m not seeing “AI” as being anything but an excuse there. On the cloud side, AI involves server farms with physical interconnects. Same for endpoint AI, and edge server AI.
Are they saying that accessing these systems depends on fast, reliable access? Like, faster and more reliable than using Google from your web browser over the past 20 years?
The whole point of ML systems is that all the heavy compute and speed dependent stuff happens somewhere with dedicated bandwidth to handle it, and the interface can be slower and lossier because the service can take more steps without guidance.
Yeah word salad especially if there is progress to have local model running on your device rather than the privacy nightmare of the cloud based solutions.