For what?
I wonder if that will be too late for the iPhone 16 next year? I was thinking about buying a new iPhone but I was going to wait and not buy the 15 hoping to get better WI-Fi support in later hardware.Official 802.11be IEEE Task Group timeline is here.
Depending on which milestone you choose, certification looks like Sept or Dec 2024
In the past, Apple has gone slow in bringing new Wi-Fi standards into its products.I wonder if that will be too late for the iPhone 16 next year? I was thinking about buying a new iPhone but I was going to wait and not buy the 15 hoping to get better WI-Fi support in later hardware.
MLO for starters, for those of us who work from our phones.In the past, Apple has gone slow in bringing new Wi-Fi standards into its products.
I really don't know what practical benefit you'd get from 7 in a phone.
The technical specifications of 802.11be are essentially complete
MLO for starters, for those of us who work from our phones.
Financial industry. It’s not about speed. I’m looking at the latency and reliability provided by MLO.My iPhone connects at 1200Mbps link speed, or about 800Mbps possible throughput. What work on your phone requires faster speeds? Just curious.
I live in a condo building with congested wifi. I’ve also had occasional signal disruptions on the 5Ghz band. It’s why I was an early adopter for 6Ghz and it’s been great for me.I'm sorry, but my wireless devices stay connected forever. Reliability was never an issue. How many milliseconds latency improvement will make your work better on a phone? Human reaction time is about 250ms. What practical difference it makes if your financial data arrive 10ms later? Your brain can't register it so fast. You have AX multiband in theory. Why don't you use it? It's in AX specifications.
And right there is the reason I'll sit waiting for the second generation this time.@Jansen3 The only benefit to releasing routers with pre-release standard hardware and firmware is to networking companies' bottom lines. Each new technology, MIMO, MU-MIMO, OFDMA and now MLO has been over-hyped and under-delivered.
Perhaps someday MLO will deliver the benefits you cite. But not in the first generation for sure. I would hate to be the engineers developing the AP schedulers. MLO adds another set of decisions to make about how and when to send a packet.
Stick to discussing facts and not editorializing on others' choices.
Each new technology, MIMO, MU-MIMO, OFDMA and now MLO has been over-hyped and under-delivered.
And right there is the reason I'll sit waiting for the second generation this time.
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