I think the key differentiator being touted for Wifi 7 vs Wifi 6/E is Multi-Link Operation (MLO) where your Wifi 7 router and Wifi 7 client can use up to two bands concurrently or quickly switch between two bands to maximise throughput and compensate for the 6Ghz band's relatively short range.
I didn't say that the 6Ghz band wouldn't be a game changer. MLO supposedly will allow the user to switch between the 5Ghz band which has greater range and the 6Ghz band which has higher throughput. So both can be used concurrently to overcome the shorter range encountered on the 6Ghz band as well as the increasingly crowded 5Ghz band depending on network conditions. Of course, this is all in theory until we see more Wifi 7 clients hit the market and allow users to test if that's a reality.Seems like the same old story to me: the manufacturers tout behavior that you will only reach if you live in the sticks with no nearby wifi-using neighbors. Where I live, reality is that the 2.4GHz band is completely saturated and 5GHz is getting there (at least if you can't use DFS channels, which again is typical in urban locations). I believe that the 6GHz band will make life better. I don't believe that multiband operation is going to add much on top of that.
This is why I’m excited about Wifi 7. MLO is a big game changer. The stuff coming out of the 802.11BE TG is pretty interesting if you want to get deeper into it.I think the key differentiator being touted for Wifi 7 vs Wifi 6/E is Multi-Link Operation (MLO) where your Wifi 7 router and Wifi 7 client can use up to two bands concurrently or quickly switch between two bands to maximise throughput and compensate for the 6Ghz band's relatively short range.
Multi-link Operation (MLO) gives WiFi 7 routers and devices an undeniable advantage over last-gen tech - Edge Up
WiFi 7 marks the debut of Multi-Link Operation (MLO), a technology that lets clients and access points use more than one band simultaneously.edgeup.asus.com
Ok, so for the record you are saying that MLO or CA in cellular networks is not adding or aggregating several channels together? You're so adamant about this being wrong that I am curious what you think the actual correct description of these technologies is, in general terms. I mean it's literally called "multi-link operation", I feel like it's pretty self-explanatory, but I could be missing something.No, your posts haven't made anything clearer. What you're stating is not how things work. But, let's drop it, sure.
I was referring specifically to quad band MLO, which will require 4 radios and a whole lot of processing power. Qualcomm really sees it as the best way to lower latency, more so than to boost bandwidth.Quad-band will be really useful for wireless backhaul I think, or segmenting your home network e.g. separate bands for family use, IoT devices etc.
From what I recall, MLO has multiple operating modes and one of these is Simultaneous Transmit and Receive (STR). It allows for using 1 radio (ie 5 GHz) for upload and 1 radio (ie 6 GHz) for download as a valid combo, which is effectively a full duplex connection as you postulated.I haven't investigated but it just occurred to me how slick it could be if MLO is configurable for an association with one radio transmit and the other receive, for pseudo-effective full duplex operation. Is this in the deck of cards currently being shuffled?
It'll be interesting to see how MLO will improve the throughput performance on quad band routers given that the current configuration (2.4G, 5G1, 5G2, 6G) ends up splitting the 5G band in half and makes it harder to be able to consistently access the DFS channels. With a number of the Wifi 7 quad band routers including the GT-98/Pro switching things up (2.4G, 5G, 6G1, 6G2), they will likely derive higher aggregated throughput from Enhanced Multi-Link Single Radio Modes as per MediaTek's plug here:I was referring specifically to quad band MLO, which will require 4 radios and a whole lot of processing power. Qualcomm really sees it as the best way to lower latency, more so than to boost bandwidth.
But most MLO implementions will be tri band since you already have those radios. It’ll mostly be firmware that unlocks the potential, don’t think there’s too much on the hardware side to optimize.
Of course the client side will be the most important component. I believe Apple will be going heavily into Wifi 7 for MLO and constant connectivity. This is what everyone was hoping for with Smart Connect, but a much cleaner implementation.
Thank you. Of course it will require discrete antennae per radio for fullest effect. Can only hope...From what I recall, MLO has multiple operating modes and one of these is Simultaneous Transmit and Receive (STR). It allows for using 1 radio (ie 5 GHz) for upload and 1 radio (ie 6 GHz) for download as a valid combo, which is effectively a full duplex connection as you postulated.
That's true, I'm getting higher speeds and range on the 5Ghz (DFS) bands vs the 6Ghz bands. That said, MLO is supposed to combine the use of both 5Ghz and 6Ghz bands to give you a 'best of both worlds' throughput and usage scenario. However, as the feature has yet to be released on routers or Wifi 7 clients (PCs) there's no way to know how well it'll work until we can test it ourselves.6 GHz is terrible unless you're in the same room. Lower legal power limit than the higher DFS 5 GHz channels and higher frequency, for AiMesh wireless backhaul it's useless, and for clients too 5 GHz is better. If you're not near an airport, the DFS channels above 100 are excellent with 30 dbm legal power limit, which if both devices can utilise especially, makes a huge difference. Furthermore, you can't use 3rd party antennas on any device with 6 GHz, so again any sort of point-to-point type use case is hindered.
But yes if you have hardwired APs in every room, go nuts with 320 MHz channels hopefully without interference.
But the way I see it, it'll contaminate my interference-free high-power DFS channel with high-latency congested 2.4 GHz and weak-signal 6 GHz... Plus it's more overhead and potential for glitches. I don't need super high speeds, I'd rather have the stability and performance of my selected channel. So I don't know, I mean carrier aggregation makes a lot of sense for cellular networks, but for Wi-Fi it seems gimmicky. I'm sure there will be a way to disable it, I just wonder how that will play with AiMesh and Smart Connect.That's true, I'm getting higher speeds and range on the 5Ghz (DFS) bands vs the 6Ghz bands. That said, MLO is supposed to combine the use of both 5Ghz and 6Ghz bands to give you a 'best of both worlds' throughput and usage scenario. However, as the feature has yet to be released on routers or Wifi 7 clients (PCs) there's no way to know how well it'll work until we can test it ourselves.
This doesn’t make any sense at all. Signals on different frequencies will not “contaminate” your wifi.But the way I see it, it'll contaminate my interference-free high-power DFS channel with high-latency congested 2.4 GHz and weak-signal 6 GHz... Plus it's more overhead and potential for glitches. I don't need super high speeds, I'd rather have the stability and performance of my selected channel. So I don't know, I mean carrier aggregation makes a lot of sense for cellular networks, but for Wi-Fi it seems gimmicky. I'm sure there will be a way to disable it, I just wonder how that will play with AiMesh and Smart Connect.
6 GHz has a much lower legal power limit compared to channels 100-128. And it can be about 1 GHz higher than channels 100-128, which does make a difference as well. Before you say that high power is useless because your devices can't talk back to the AP 1) It's still very much useful for download, 2) If you're connecting 2 devices that both support the higher limit (e.g. 2 routers in AiMesh), then it does make a substantial difference. I've tested 24 dbm vs 30 dbm links and the latter is much better, how could it not be.With 5GHz operating within a hair's width away from 6GHz, I don't see how 6GHz bands will be impacted much (for range).
2.4GHz cannot 'contaminate' the 6GHz band. And the processors are significantly more powerful than anything we have today, so I don't expect a slowdown there either.
There are more improvements to WiFi 7 than a mere doubling of the bandwidth. On a properly built (hardware-wise) and fully fleshed out (firmware-wise) model, the differences should be significant.
I need to use Smart Connect in my deployment, and of course I can't count on clients supporting MLO for at least another 10 years. But they may not be mutually exclusive.Smart Connect sucks
On the "contamination" point - of course it does, if you're aggregating 2.4 GHz and 6 GHz onto my Channel 100, then you're introducing all the latency and signal strength issues of those links into the aggregated connection. Maybe MLO is smart enough to use the high-performance band as an anchor and manage the rest intelligently, but I don't trust it, much rather not introduce the extra variables. I prefer stability over speed. And moreover, MLO probably requires the same power limit on all bands, so now my Channel 100 has to go down to 24 dbm, which kills its main advantage. It'll need to be tested ultimately, but I don't see how it can be as good as using a single channel.
I need to use Smart Connect in my deployment, and of course I can't count on clients supporting MLO for at least another 10 years. But they may not be mutually exclusive.
Yeah they're not mutually exclusive in theory, you can have a client connect to an SSID corresponding to a single channel as normal, and then if the client supports MLO and it's enabled, you can aggregate additional channels from the same band or other bands, with the main one you're connected to acting as "anchor", similar to how 5G NSA works. Well I hope you're right about the potential performance benefits, will have to see what the reviews say, but I'm still skeptical and of course I don't want to compromise on power limit.The terminology you’re using is a bit weird, but I think I get your concerns.
It depends on firmware and which MLO mode is used, but the way to think of it is all three bands are connected simultaneously, which gives you much greater reliability than Smart Connect, which switches between 2.4 and 5 GHz.
Also note that MLO is being built specifically around latency concerns. Rollover and interference mitigation were cited in the 802.11 TG for MLO.
6 GHz has a much lower legal power limit compared to channels 100-128. And it can be about 1 GHz higher than channels 100-128, which does make a difference as well. Before you say that high power is useless because your devices can't talk back to the AP 1) It's still very much useful for download, 2) If you're connecting 2 devices that both support the higher limit (e.g. 2 routers in AiMesh), then it does make a substantial difference. I've tested 24 dbm vs 30 dbm links and the latter is much better, how could it not be.
On the "contamination" point - of course it does, if you're aggregating 2.4 GHz and 6 GHz onto my Channel 100, then you're introducing all the latency and signal strength issues of those links into the aggregated connection. Maybe MLO is smart enough to use the high-performance band as an anchor and manage the rest intelligently, but I don't trust it, much rather not introduce the extra variables. I prefer stability over speed. And moreover, MLO probably requires the same power limit on all bands, so now my Channel 100 has to go down to 24 dbm, which kills its main advantage. It'll need to be tested ultimately, but I don't see how it can be as good as using a single channel.
I need to use Smart Connect in my deployment, and of course I can't count on clients supporting MLO for at least another 10 years. But they may not be mutually exclusive.
That's not what I said, I meant adding channels from those bands to Channel 100.It is impossible to aggregate 2.4GHz and 6GHz on Channel 100.
I know you didn't say it, but I get preemptively defensive about it because there's always at least one guy who says higher power is useless because the client can't shout as loud as the AP, and I'm tired of hearing that, sorry if that was rude.As I don't use channels 100 - 128 (I use the higher channels), the power is the same in my case. I've never said higher power was useless. The router's sensitivity/noise rejection must also match though to be a true range increase.
Again, that's not what I meant, but I don't feel like typing anymore.MLO will be supported by new WiFi 7 clients as soon as they are released after WiFi 7 is certified. It won't be in 2033 when that feature is available to be used.
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