Wi-Fi CERTIFIED 7 Announced

By

Latest Wi-Fi technology offers increased performance.

The Wi-Fi Alliance has announced Wi-Fi CERTIFIED 7, bringing “powerful new features that boost Wi-Fi performance and improve connectivity across a variety of environments.”

According to the announcement, Wi-Fi 7 technology will deliver “higher data throughputs and support deterministic latency for sophisticated use cases that demand exceptional reliability.”

Advanced features, such as 320 MHz channels and multi-link operation, offer the following benefits:

  • 2x higher throughput
  • Deterministic latency and increased efficiency
  • 20% higher transmission rates
  • Enhanced spectral efficiency

Learn more from the Wi-Fi Alliance website.
 
 
 

 
 
 

01/22/2024

Related content

  • News for Admins
    In the news: CIQ Offers Long-Term Support for Rocky Linux on AWS; Apple's PQ3 Brings Post-Quantum Security to iMessage; Google Open Sources Magika File-Type Detection System; Microsoft Announces Sudo for Windows; Linux Foundation Launches Post-Quantum Cryptography Alliance; Sys Admins Saw the Biggest Average Salary Increase in 2023, According to Dice; Use of Open Source Software Increased Significantly in 2023; Docker Build Cloud Announced; Wi-Fi CERTIFIED 7 Announced; EU Commissions Nostradamus Project for Quantum Testing; and NIST Identifies Main Types of Adversarial Machine Learning Threats, GitLab Announces Critical Security Releases.
  • WiFi 6 in the Enterprise
    The 802.11ax WiFi 6 standard uses LTE technology to solve the congestion problems experienced with older standards.
  • Industrial Wireless Standards at a Glance
    New wireless standards significantly expand the potential applications for wireless communication in industrial and IoT environments, but not every standard is suitable for every task. We look at which technologies are suitable for which use case.
  • News for Admins
    In the news: Yet Another Botnet Targeting Linux, Linux Kernel 5.11 Released,Ubuntu Core 20 Officially Released, CloudLinux Offering Lifecycle Support Service for Expired Linux Distributions
  • Linux Kernel 5.11 has been Released
comments powered by Disqus