Historic IEEE 802 Group Looks Back and Forward 45
Posted
by
samzenpus
from the state-of-things dept.
from the state-of-things dept.
An anonymous reader writes "The IEEE MAN/LAN Standards Committee — better known as the people who brought us Ethernet, Wi-Fi, and Bluetooth — is celebrating its 30th anniversary next week. This article has interviews with the original committee chairman and other veteran members, and reveals some of the inside situation. It also looks at some of the upcoming 802.x standards including one that sends data by modulating visible light."
IEEE Bluetooth? (Score:3, Insightful)
IEEE did not develop the Bluetooth standard
Upcoming? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:IEEE Bluetooth? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:So let me just get this straight (Score:1, Insightful)
Wonderful... (Score:3, Insightful)
Ah, the ol' 802.3 gang... (Score:3, Insightful)
Cool. I've worked with Paul Nikolich (when ADC broadband bought bought the CMTS company he was at), and have run into some of this cast of characters during the 802.3ah Ethernet in the First Mile meetings. Interesting folks.
I think it was Geoff (I could be wrong, this was a while ago) that said we would not need high-speed uplink from the home because 'there just isn't that much relevant content out there'. That was a pretty good chuckler.
I'm sure Michael Coden of Codenoll feels snubbed, he always claimed to me he was the co-inventor of ethernet.Never believed him.
He did pioneer one interesting product- a distributed ethernet switch that would operate over a unidirectional fiber ring- worked pretty well after I fixed the gaping hole in his protocol.
Dave
Small correction (Score:3, Insightful)
The official name of 802 is the IEEE 802 [ieee802.org] "LAN/MAN Standards Committee," not the other way around.