Telecommunications
Dell puts next gen WiFi, 802.11n, into laptops | Dell puts next gen WiFi, 802.11n, into laptops |
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| by Stuart Corner | |
| Tuesday, 18 July 2006 | |
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Dell has become one of the first laptop makers to offer support for the draft 802.11n wireless networking standard, but because the standard is still only a draft, full performance will only be achieved when used with base stations incorporating matching Broadcom 802.11n chipsets.
Dell has announced an internal wireless mini card claimed to be capable of delivering up to five times the speed (270Mbps) and twice the range of the widely used 802.11g Wi-Fi technology when connected to a wireless network router using Broadcom's Intensi-fi 802.11n chipset. The Intensi-fi chipset range comprises the BCM4321, claimed to be the world's first draft-802.11n media access controller and baseband processor and interfacing to PCI, CardBus and PCI-Express hosts; and the BCM2055 supporting multiple input multiple output technology and claimed to be "the best-performing 802.11 radio, featuring smaller die size, lower power consumption, and lower phase noise and error vector magnitude than competing products."
Dell also unveiled a new software utility, Dell Network Assistant developed with SingleClick Systems, to help simplify the set-up and management of wireless networks. The application is pre-installed on all new Dell XPS systems, Inspiron notebooks, Dimension desktops and select Dell Precision workstations. It can be downloaded for installation on existing systems from www.dell.com/networkassistant and costs $US39 after a trial period. |
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