From FierceWIFI:
The chair of the IEEE task group entrusted with establishing the
standard for the technology warned that too many regulations may choke
UWB to death. Indeed, he said that these contemplated restrictions pose
more risk to the future of the technology than the impasse between the
UWB camps
promoting different standards for it. Bob Heile, chair of the IEEE
802.15.3a working group, said that if Europe and Asia applied more
restrictions to the technology than the US FCC, the technology may be
hobbled to the point where it would not perform well enough to displace
WiFi.
"I believe we will see regulations in Europe that are substantially
more restrictive than those applied by the FCC," he said. "Japan is
likely to be even more conservative. If that happens, how good is the
performance going to be?"
The regulations under discussion would limit UWB to a narrower slice
of spectrum, and would reduce its speed and reach. These additional
limitations will occur while WiFi is steadily improving. By 2007,
802.11n will be established with theoretical speeds of 110 to 200 Mbps.
Practical speeds will
more likely be in the 45 Mbps range. UWB boasts 480 Mbps at short
range, but add a little ditance to the broadcast and regulations
limiting spectrum use and UWB will be slowed down to near-802.11n
speeds. The recent announcement of a UWB-Bluetooth collaboration was
hailed as a boon to the two
technologies, but Heile is skeptical of the immdeidtae value to UWB.
Not all UWB vendors accept Heile's alarmist view of the possible
Japanese and European restrictions. Bruce Watkins, CEO of Pulse-Link --
which says its technology would deliver speeds higher than 480 Mbps
-- said that, "If they cut out the lower frequencies, I can move
higher. I can
get the same throughput at 8GHz as I can at 4GHz." He then added,
"There's nothing about 802.11n that bothers my business model."
For more on possible additional restrictions on UWB: - see Peter Judge's Techworld discussion
PLUS: People continue to talk about the impasse
between the two UWB camps and their proposals for the technology -- the
OFDM-based version proposed by the WiMedia Alliance, and the DS
versions put forth by the UWB Forum. Less known is the Continuous Wave
UWB proposed by
Pulse-Link. Continuous Wave UWB uses no analog mixers or local
oscillators, resulting in a less complex implementation. It uses
variable spreading codes which can trade data-rate for range, and its
spectral characteristics allow flexibility to satisfy different
regulatory constraints. Release
ALSO: Worried about the ramifications for UWB of
regulations narrowing its allowed spectrum? Cognitive radio and RF
spectrum multi-purposing are poinited to as allowing for increased
spectral efficiency. Analysis
FINALLY: UWB-equipped Mercedes that cannot crash are almost here. Report
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