WiGig, Innovation and the Analog IP Challenge
WiGig improves WiFi (802.11) wireless protocol, but the path to glory is fraught with design challenges.
We’ve all written the phrase "quickening pace of change" so often over the decades it’s almost lost its impact. It’s become like a bowl of peanuts at a party: you expect to see it as part of the food spread but it never really sets your heart pounding. But now comes something that’s going to insert a little energy back into the phrase; something that really is going to change how fast change is coming to electronics system design.
It’s an improved version of the longstanding workhorse WiFi (802.11) wireless protocol, which in itself was a game-changer. It’s 802.11ad, also known as WiGig. It brings breathtakingly fast speed to the 60GHz range and has the potential to transform system design the way its grandfather, 802.11, did when it was first released in 1997.
The headline feature of the specification is that it transmits data at 7 Gb/second, lightning fast. Add to that beam-forming capability to push that data beyond 10 meters and protocol adaptation layers under development for use with data buses for PCs, monitors, and projectors and whole new application worlds open up. “The 60GHz standard has the means to deliver a wire-like performance in various environments, including pretty dense corporate environments,” said Yaron Kahana, Intel Corp.’s WiGig product manager. “It promises the best wireless display and the fastest wireless USB experience.”
To read the full article, click here
Related Semiconductor IP
Related Blogs
- The Industry’s First USB4 Device IP Certification Will Speed Innovation and Edge AI Enablement
- Analog Bits Steals the Show with Working IP on TSMC 3nm and 2nm and a New Design Strategy
- Guarding against the threat of clock attacks with analog IP
- The Road to Innovation with Synopsys 224G PHY IP From Silicon to Scale: Synopsys 224G PHY Enables Next Gen Scaling Networks
Latest Blogs
- Accelerating Your Development: Simplify SoC I/O with a Single Multi-Protocol SerDes IP
- Why What Where DIFI and the new version 1.3
- Accelerating PCIe Gen6 L0p Verification for AI & HPC Designs using Synopsys VIP
- ML-DSA explained: Quantum-Safe digital Signatures for secure embedded Systems
- Efficiency Defines The Future Of Data Movement