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June 19 2003
Intel has confirmed that its Centrino chip bundle will support the 802.11g
wireless standard by the end of the year.
The company had originally planned combined 802.11a, b and g products for the
middle of next year, but brought the date forward because the standards are
progressing more quickly than expected.
An Intel spokesman told vnunet.com: "With the 802.11g specification coming
together and interoperability forums and standards efforts coalescing later this
year, we intend to be in production with an 802.11b/g solution in the fourth
quarter of this year."
The 802.11g standard offers 54Mbps Wi-Fi connectivity over the 2.4GHz spectrum
and is backwards compatible with 802.11b systems.
The Wi-Fi Alliance, which organises interoperability testing between
manufacturers, says it expects to have 802.11g products on the market within
weeks of the final Institute for Electrical and Electronics Engineers standard
being announced, which is likely to be in June rather than later, as previously
expected.
Intel has also put back the date for introducing combined 802.11a and b products
to the third quarter of the year.
The company launched the Centrino chip bundle for extended use mobile computing
at its Developer Forum in February. It consists of a low power Pentium 4 chipset
and wireless bundle.
At the launch of Centrino, Intel committed to integrating the latest wireless
technology to the chip bundle.
As long as Centrino sticks to the standard about to be ratified this will work,
observed Michael Wall, analyst with Frost and Sullivan.
"It's not a good idea to start too early before the final certifications have
been completed. However, if they stick to a reasonable timetable they should be
fine - the danger is starting too early and getting it wrong," he said.
802.11g products are already available, but problems with interoperability have
caused most vendors to hold off on releasing anything.
But a report earlier this month by researchers Dell'Oro Group found 802.11g
products already accounting for 16 per cent of the market revenue and 17 per
cent of shipments.
802.11b products currently account for 81 per cent of the market.
Separately, US Robotics will ship its 802.11g Wireless Turbo family of products
in July, which will allow users to send and receive data at up to 100Mbps.
The company claims that its Accelerator Technology can deliver data throughput
nearly double that of other 802.11g products, by making the most out of network
capacity by placing all the speed on a single channel.
Each is compatible with all 54Mbps 802.11g, 22Mbps and 11Mbps 802.11b wireless
devices, to allow each one to connect at the fastest speeds possible.
The Turbo range includes an access point and router (£99.99), multifunction
access point (£119.99), PCI adaptor (£59.99) and PC card (£59.99).
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