So-called "Wireless N" or "Draft N" routers available today are based on a draft version of the 802.11n industry specification.
Did you know you can network home entertainment gear with computers? Learn more about displaying digital photos on TV screens and streaming live TV programs onto your computer by adding this equipment to your home network.
Researchers at the University of California ave developed a different wireless system capable of spanning many miles or kilometers. Called WiLDNet (Wireless Long Distance Network), the project offers free software that works with standard Wi-Fi hardware. It has the admirable goal to bring wireless to rural and less-developed areas of the world that Wi-Fi cannot reach. So far, WiLDNet has had some success in initial pilots.
→ See also - TIER Wireless Research at UC Berkeley
While the current speed of this WiMax service is unremarkable compared to established cable or DSL packages, it supports mobile (roaming) access. Unlike cable or DSL, you can take your network equipment with you while traveling and connect to the Internet with it from anywhere with Xohm coverage. This feature will become useful when Sprint expands their coverage nationally. Meanwhile, watch for reports of this new service from customers to judge how well it performs.
→ More - One of the First U.S. WiMax Customers Reports Out
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