Wi-Fi speeds to hit 2.5Gbps in 2010?

Radio scientists at IBM Research and MediaTek are teaming up to develop a wireless transmission protocol that will deliver files more than 100 times faster than Wi-Fi.

The idea is to take advantage of the 60GHz spectrum, according to Mehmet Soyuer, the lead researcher on the project, who is based in IBM's T.J. Watson Research Centre in Yorktown Heights, New York.

These chips will be able to transfer files at around 2.5 gigabits per second, compared with the 11 to 54 megabits of Wi-Fi. Hence the 100 times faster calculation, Soyuer said.

Put another way, these chips could transfer a 10 gigabyte file wirelessly in five seconds or so, something that would take several minutes on a Wi-Fi network.

The 60GHz spectrum is part of the millimetre wave spectrum, which runs from 30GHz to 300GHz. SiBeam, which is the driving force behind the WirelessHD consortium, has been showing off 60GHz chips in TVs and will make a big push for them at CES. Other companies are also coming out with high-end wireless video and audio chips.

IBM brings the radio expertise to the project while MediaTek will work on the digital signal processing.

IBM and MediaTek want to have something out in three years.

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Talkback 4 comments

    2.5G by 2010 not in australia david -- 23/10/07

    looks good sounds good by not likely to happen

    Some poor maths there ... Anonymous -- 23/10/07

    A 2.5 Gigabit connection is not going to transfer a 10 Gigabyte file in 5 seconds, given there are 8 bits to a byte.

    Should be between 40 and 50 seconds, and even then only under ideal circumstances.

    i dont think we wer supposed to spot that Matt G -- 26/10/07 (in reply to #320088496)

    I was about to point the same error out - until I read your comment.

    One thing your forgetting though, this is marketting and hype - not supposed to paying much attention to facts.

    Who the hell needs to move a 10 GB file wirelessly anyway ?

    I'm more than happy with my 10MBps WiFi - after all it's downstream from my Internet connection which will always be the logical bottleneck ;-)

    64kb is all we ever need Anonymous -- 25/05/08 (in reply to #320088661)

    If anyone caught what point my title was trying to convey, then you'd understand.

    Who needs it? everyone and everything! Think about it WIRELESS connection from your DVR/Blu-Ray player, NAS streaming to your plasma TV. Another step to saying good bye to wires(until we can transmit power wirelessly =P)

    LANs can now be built on wireless technology for heavy duty use instead of just for light weight internet surfing, etc.

    There are numerous many other reasons. XP started out with a recommended 128MB of ram. Now most of us want 1GB as a minimum.

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