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WiMAX-2 approved, offering up to 300Mbps speed

Apr 1, 2011 — by LinuxDevices Staff — from the LinuxDevices Archive — 5 views

WiMAX-2, which also goes by the less catchy “WirelessMAN-Advanced” and “802.16m” monikers, has been approved by the IEEE. Touted as offering up to 300Mbps speed, 802.16m may be too late to offset the momentum of rival 4G technology LTE.

WiMAX is getting a boost, just as rival 4G technology LTE seems to have all the momentum. Global standards body Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers has approved IEEE 802.16m, the wireless standard for the next generation of WiMAX. Also known as WiMAX-2, or WirelessMAN-Advanced, the standard potentially could offer downstream speeds of more than 300Mbps.

WiMAX-2 was the work of "hundreds of creative and diligent professionals from over 20 countries during the last four years," Roger Marks, chairman of the IEEE 802.16 Working Group said in a March 31 statement.

The speedy 802.16m, the IEEE has announced, incorporates multi-user MIMO (multiple input, multiple output), multicarrier operation and cooperative communications, and supports femtocells, self-organizing networks, and relays. It's going to be adopted, the IEEE added, by "major worldwide governmental and industrial organizations," such as the Association of Radio Industries and Businesses, and the WiMAX Forum

WiMAX is the flavor of 4G offered by Sprint, through partner Clearwire, and was the first type of 4G network to debut. While T-Mobile began offering 4G services based on HSPA+ technology in Nov. 2010, and Verizon launched its LTE (Long-Term Evolution)-based network a month later, Sprint, like a number of carriers around the globe, began offering WiMAX in 2008. AT&T now also offers HSPA+, though it has plans to roll out LTE toward the middle of this year.

While WiMAX, LTE, and HSPA+ have all been accepted as 4G technologies, only WiMAX2 and LTE-Advanced, a next generation of the LTE currently offered, meet the ITU (International Telecommunication Union) criteria for being a true 4G technology.

Too late to beat LTE?

Despite WiMAX's significant head start, LTE is, by many accounts, expected to become the predominant 4G technology. ABI Research, in a September 2010 report, forecast mobile WiMAX subscribers to approach 59 million in 2015, while In-Stat expects LTE subscribers to near 115 million by 2014.

Aware of LTE's popularity, Sprint CEO Dan Hesse has said the carrier is considering rolling out an LTE network alongside its WiMAX network, and in August 2010 Clearwire announced plans to conduct 4G LTE trials, while again insisting on its commitment to WiMAX, at least for the time being.

"As we have consistently stated, we remain technology agnostic, but WiMAX provides us with unique advantages to meet the needs of our customers today," Clearwire CTO John Saw said in a statement at the time.

Sprint, which is the majority owner of Clearwire, has previously expressed interest in WiMAX-2. But with Clearwire currently struggling to find funding to keep its WiMAX buildout proceeding, and Sprint facing the stress of being dwarfed by AT&T's proposed purchase of T-Mobile, it's unlikely to pursue the technology anytime soon.

Michelle Maisto is a writer for our sister publication eWEEK.


This article was originally published on LinuxDevices.com and has been donated to the open source community by QuinStreet Inc. Please visit LinuxToday.com for up-to-date news and articles about Linux and open source.



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