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MIT Scientists Develop New Wi-Fi That's 330% Faster (msn.com) 86

An anonymous reader quotes a report from MSN: Scientists at MIT claim to have created a new wireless technology that can triple Wi-Fi data speeds while also doubling the range of the signal. Dubbed MegaMIMO 2.0, the system will shortly enter commercialization and could ease the strain on our increasingly crowded wireless networks. Multiple-input-multiple-output technology, or MIMO, helps networked devices perform better by combining multiple transmitters and receivers that work simultaneously, allowing then to send and receive more than one data signal at the same time. MIT's MegaMIMO 2.0 works by allowing several routers to work in harmony, transmitting data over the same piece of spectrum. MIT claimed that during tests, MegaMIMO 2.0 was able to increase data transfer speed of four laptops connected to the same Wi-Fi network by 330 percent. Paper co-author Rahul said the technology could also be applied to mobile phone networks to solve similar congestion issues. "In today's wireless world, you can't solve spectrum crunch by throwing more transmitters at the problem, because they will all still be interfering with one another," Ezzeldin Hamed, lead author on a paper on the topic, told MIT News. "The answer is to have all those access points work with each other simultaneously to efficiently use the available spectrum."
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MIT Scientists Develop New Wi-Fi That's 330% Faster

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  • Except for high security environments, I wonder if we will soon see the day when wired network access is as rare as 8-track cartridges?

    • by Anonymous Coward

      There will never be a wireless network that outperforms a wired network. Even if their throughput claims aren't 100% bullshit in the real world (unlike all previous wireless speed claims) you still have the fundamental problem of very limited wireless bandwidth (the technical term, not the vernacular meaning!) to work with since a wireless connection has to play nice any only use a tiny sliver of feasible frequencies to avoid interference with other wireless signals.

      Wired networks do not have the same degre

      • by sims 2 ( 994794 )

        I have to mention yes this was 2 years ago but I feel it's relevant).
        Someone did a ask /. on how to build a network to handle google fiber without doing any modifications to the building.

        https://ask.slashdot.org/story... [slashdot.org]

        He was planning on using a poweline adapters and wanted to know a better solution IIRC /. pretty much just said run a wire there is not any wireless solution that could handle those speeds.

        • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

          Want to run cable with minimum disruption to the building than eg http://www.skirtec.com.au/ [skirtec.com.au] . Skirting and architrave ducts. Simply pull off the empty solid ones and replace with hollow ones that can accommodate cables and outlets. Always, always go with wire where you can, everything will run much smoother. So you work in ceiling space, bring cable down at doorways to the floor and around the room you go. To get from floor to floor, drill a hole, use fixed floor to ceiling cupboards, with removable backs

      • Even if their throughput claims aren't 100% bullshit...

        Do you mean as much bullshit or twice as much bullshit ? I'm confused...

    • by sims 2 ( 994794 )

      Not any time soon.

      It's still going to be wired coming out of your cable/dsl modem or optical transceiver.

      Someday it might be done 100% cellular but not as long as they insist on having an access charge for every device you own.

      10GB of data is 10GB of data it doesn't (with current networks anyway) matter if I use it on one cell phone or 1000 IOT monitors I strapped to the trees outside to monitor their O2 production.

    • by EndlessNameless ( 673105 ) on Wednesday August 24, 2016 @06:10PM (#52765073)

      I can run 10 Gbps on fiber over a distance of 40 km using 5 watts of power. I have zero interference and can run as many lines in parallel as I want. And this is with typical enterprise equipment---I assume the telco guys have better options.

      Call me when wireless can do that. Or not, as I'll probably be running 40 Gbps (or higher) by then.

      • by SJ ( 13711 )

        That's amazing!

        How much did it cost you to lay the fibre along that 40km route again?

        Cost/Benefit... HOW DOES IT WORK???

  • by CanadianMacFan ( 1900244 ) on Wednesday August 24, 2016 @05:23PM (#52764773)

    Since they are talking about many devices connecting to multiple routers it's not going to do much for the average home user then. I may have a couple of devices but only the one router. They haven't found a new Wi-Fi but a method for coordinating the routers to handle the load as they say their method could be applied to cell stations too.

    • Yeah, it sounds like the old dialup thing where you could get a special account with your ISP and use two modems.

    • by b0bby ( 201198 )

      Since they are talking about many devices connecting to multiple routers it's not going to do much for the average home user then. I may have a couple of devices but only the one router.

      More and more mesh router systems are coming out - Netgear's Orbi was just announced; Ubiquiti's Amplifi, Luma and Eemo are also out there. Your next router may well have multiple base stations. I know that's something I'm thinking of, but I want to see how these all shake out for a bit first.

    • by linuxguy ( 98493 )
      I already have two good routers at home. One at each corner of my house. Both purchased for less than $100 each. If the speed and range promises are even half of what is bring promised, I do not see a problem with people spending a couple of hundred bucks to pick up a dual router solution. Someone like me would not think twice about it. But yeah, businesses would be ALL OVER IT.
      • by bn-7bc ( 909819 )
        Hmm 2 routers you say, so each wifi nerwork runs on a dedicated subnet and ssid or do you mean access points? I wish people (at least on slashdot) would stopp calling aps routers when they dont route (ie have ar least one active RIB)
        • Don't they have an "upstream" network plug, and (usually) 4 "downstream" connections. So isn't that routing? (..and giving the downstream items addresses from its DHCP server?)

    • Since they are talking about many devices connecting to multiple routers it's not going to do much for the average home user then. I may have a couple of devices but only the one router.

      Actually:
      - If you got a second router, put it some distance away from the first, and hooked them together with a network cable, you could use two devices about as fast as you could one with one router.
      - If you had three wired routers you could use three devices close to as fast as you could use one with one r

      • Also: You could relay between one device and another out of range with it about as fast as they could talk if they were in range of each other, rather than cutting that rate in half as each talks to a router and the router repeats what it heard.

  • Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Wednesday August 24, 2016 @06:01PM (#52765007)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Rather than concentrate on speed, they need to concentrate on co-existence. In many places the number of wifi APs screaming over multiple channels causes severe performance problems.

      It's particuarly bad in urban environments where walls make the "hidden transmitter" problem much worse. Essentially you have two APs screaming as loud as they can, but too far apart to hear each other. Someone in the middle who can hear both can't make out what either is saying, or what the other person in the room is saying at

      • Or just build in synchronization and polling. GPS chips to get timing are dirt cheap. And even if they're not, just make sure that any of the APs in the network that ARE getting good gps timing are broadcasting NTP internally. For local Wi-Fi, that will be more than sufficient.
  • Link to the paper (Score:5, Informative)

    by Ungrounded Lightning ( 62228 ) on Wednesday August 24, 2016 @06:35PM (#52765215) Journal

    Here are direct links to the paper's download page [mit.edu] and the paper itself. [mit.edu]

  • The numbers are easier to understand here:http://news.mit.edu/2016/solving-network-congestion-megamimo-0823

    Both Owen Hughes' ibtimes article and the summary say "triple" the speed, which. should be four times the speed.

    Three times faster is technically correct, but seems asinine when allowing this kind of English should allow you to say "one time faster" for twice as fast ("my new car can go one time faster than my old car").
  • by Anonymous Coward

    Is this anything like the pcell thing that Steve Perlman has been working on?

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Do current FCC regulations allow for this type of coordinated approach between multiple transmitters? Maybe this is a solution for licensed operation only?

  • New cellular network designs now have a simple RF portion at the tower without baseband, connected by fiber to a datacenter which operates a unified baseband, effectively turning every tower into one part of a giant phased array radar, turning beams to the right user, and doing things like predictive handoffs and forced handoffs to farther cells that are less loaded. That regional level of awareness only works on regional networks that can have full control of private frequencies in that area though (FCC ba

  • How deos it affect latency? does that become 3.3 times more? will this introduce jitter?

I have hardly ever known a mathematician who was capable of reasoning. -- Plato

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