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Re: Did the OTA today enable 802.11n?
The IEEE seems to think that it increases range.
http://standards.ieee.org/announceme..._ratified.html IEEE Ratifies 802.11n, Wireless LAN Specification to Provide Significantly Improved Data Throughput and Range https://docs.google.com/viewer?url=h...ts_systems.pdf "under development for the IEEE 802.11 standard providing a marked increase in throughput (from 20 Mbps to around 200 Mbps, in practice) as well as range of reception (through reducing signal fading) over the IEEE 802.11a/g standards currently in use. Multiple anten- nas, or MIMO (Multiple-Input, Multiple-Output), is the key innovation used to obtain these benefits." |
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Re: Did the OTA today enable 802.11n?
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Re: Did the OTA today enable 802.11n?
Who cares what that guy said. I enabled Wifi N through the XDA patch and immediately got much better range than before. Where I was struggling to keep a signal a mere room away, I was now blazing.
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Re: Did the OTA today enable 802.11n?
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B/G/N can run on either 5ghz or 2.4ghz. 5ghz doesn't get as far range. It's penetration through walls isn't that good, but it does have better throughput, and generally alot less radio congestion since less devices operate at this frequency. Anyway I doubt are chipset supports 5ghz aka 802.11A, I can't see my 5ghz radio on my Evo. |
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Re: Did the OTA today enable 802.11n?
Both my routers at home and at work are getting over 54 mbps. At home I was between 58-60, but I was getting much higher rates further away from the router. When I was at 10-12 mbps at long range before the update I was around 19-30 after the update. At work next to the router I'm getting 68mbps.
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Re: Did the OTA today enable 802.11n?
Oh ok sorry must have misread that. I guess he has some credibility after all, but that doesn't mean hes right.
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