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Wi-Fi 7 could be here next year with mind-blowing speeds

Wi-Fi seven could be hither next year with mind-bravado speeds

Man using smartphone in home setting to connect to various online services.
(Image credit: mrmohock/Shutterstock)

If you can't tell the divergence between Wi-Fi five, Wi-Fi 6 and Wi-Fi 6e, expect out: Wi-Fi vii is already on its way.

Taiwanese chipmaker MediaTek said last calendar week that information technology had conducted the kickoff live demonstrations of the next-gen wireless-networking specification, which the Wi-Fi Alliance claims will be "capable of supporting a maximum throughput of at least thirty Gbps" when Wi-Fi 7 arrives in the next couple of years.

"The rollout of Wi-Fi 7 will marker the first fourth dimension that Wi-Fi can be a true wireline/Ethernet replacement for super high-bandwidth applications," MediaTek corporate VP Alan Hsu said in a company press release.

He added that the new protocol will "provide seamless connectivity for everything from multi-player AR/VR applications to cloud gaming and 4K calls to 8K streaming and beyond."

MediaTek said the demonstrations were for "fundamental customers and industry collaborators," only didn't proper name them, and we don't know how well the demonstrations went.

Wi-Fi seven, officially known as Institute of Electric and Electronics Engineers standard 802.11be, is still being finalized and is expected to be ready for the consumer market place in early on 2024. That timeline didn't stop MediaTek from predicting that the offset "products with Wi-Fi 7 are expected to hit the market starting in 2023," presumably simply in fourth dimension for that twelvemonth's vacation shopping season.

Wi-Fi 7 uses the same spectrum chunks as Wi-Fi six/6e (aka 802.11ax) — 2.4, 5 and six gigahertz (GHz) — just, according to MediaTek, will exist able to evangelize data more than than twice as quickly, due to a much wider bandwidth for each channel and diverse other technical improvements.

If Wi-Fi 7 can indeed deliver speeds of 30 gigabits per second (Gbps) to compatible devices, that would be well-nigh as fast as the 40 Gbps possible with the Thunderbolt wired-networking protocol, and much faster than the one-gigabit Ethernet currently bachelor to many consumers. The new standard could make running cables between devices completely obsolete.

However, it's unlikely that a home Isp will be able to deliver data speeds of anything close to xxx Gbps in the foreseeable future. Wi-Fi 7's applications would initially be for moving huge amounts of data around the local network — such as between VR goggles, 8K TVs and the like — rather than distributing what comes in from outside.

The first Wi-Fi 7 routers may be very expensive, if the first crop of Wi-Fi 6e ones are any indication. Netgear sells a Wi-Fi 6e gaming router, the Netgear Nighthawk RAXE500, for $599; its commencement Wi-Fi 6e mesh-router system, the Orbi WiFi 6E, goes for $1,499. A somewhat more affordable model, the Linksys Hydra Pro 6E, is a mere $499.

Paul Wagenseil is a senior editor at Tom'due south Guide focused on security and privacy. He has also been a dishwasher, fry melt, long-haul commuter, lawmaking monkey and video editor. He's been rooting effectually in the information-security infinite for more xv years at FoxNews.com, SecurityNewsDaily, TechNewsDaily and Tom's Guide, has presented talks at the ShmooCon, DerbyCon and BSides Las Vegas hacker conferences, shown up in random TV news spots and even moderated a panel discussion at the CEDIA home-technology conference. You lot can follow his rants on Twitter at @snd_wagenseil.

Source: https://www.tomsguide.com/news/mediatek-wifi-7-demo

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