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    Weekend work sees NBN reduce Victorian storm outage total to 7,500 premises

    Image: NBN
    The company responsible for running the National Broadband Network has said around 7,500 connections remain impacted by storm damage that occurred last week in Victoria. “As a result of impacts to other network infrastructure assets, NBN services to around 7,500 premises remain affected in outer East Melbourne in areas such as Emerald, Montrose, Belgrave, Croydon and into the Dandenong and Yarra Ranges,” NBN said in its blog on the outage. “It is likely that power restoration to some areas at this stage may take until Thursday this week, which will delay the restoration of NBN services in these areas.” By 10am on Tuesday, NBN said service to more than 151,000 premises have been restored. “NBN Co has deployed a total of around 80 generators to its infrastructure sites in areas affected by mains power outages across the state to restore services,” it said. The company has also used its Road Muster vehicles to provide satellite connectivity and device recharging a certain locations across the weekend. NBN said the vehicles would be in Olinda, Sassafras, and Kalorama on Tuesday. NBN again warned that power outages would impact whether it could restore services to premises, and it was working with power providers and emergency services in the state. At its peak on Wednesday night, approximately 200,000 premises in Victoria were without power. Related Coverage More

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    Massive data centre demands could lead to power blackouts, warns Ireland's utilities regulator

    Data centres are putting a potentially unsustainable strain on the nation’s electricity grid, Ireland’s utilities watchdog has warned.The situation has become so bad that Ireland’s Commission for Regulation of Utilities (CRU) has warned in a consultation paper that the nation could face rolling blackouts if the situation isn’t rectified. The prospect of extended blackouts from data centre energy demand has prompted EirGrid to raise an alarm. 

    “EirGrid have highlighted the considerable challenge the electricity consumer faces over the coming years. The worst outcome of which could result in load shedding and ultimately rolling blackouts. This is not acceptable to the CRU and measures need to be introduced to manage the supply demand balance,” CRU said in its report.   SEE: IT Data Centr Green Energy Policy (TechRepublic Premium)The CRU considers that data centres are “the single largest homogenous demand driver” on the grid and wants data centre operators to provide answers to enable further grid integration in order to maintain the security of electricity supply.EirGrid has told the CRU that data centres and the demand load they require are “having a major impact on the Irish electricity system currently and into the foreseeable future.” Ireland’s energy supply problems are not new. In 2017, EirGrid warned that growing energy demand in Ireland was mainly from new data centres, which are already putting a strain on Dublin’s infrastructure.

    Until it upgrades transmission equipment in Dublin, it said it may need generators to cope with demand in the short term. EirGrid said it expects data centres to account for 15% of total energy demand by 2026 – up from less than 2% in 2015.The CRU has considered three scenarios: do nothing and wait for blackouts, impose a moratorium on data centre connections, or let EirGrid request data centres to throttle consumption. “In this [second] scenario CRU could issue a Direction to the system operators to cease processing all data centre connection applications (including modifications) and new connection applications for a number of years,” the CRU wrote of its moratorium option. “The CRU does not consider this appropriate at this time as there are mechanisms that data centres can employ which in the CRUs view can contribute to their overall flexibility.”SEE: Cloud computing: Microsoft sets out new data storage options for European customersA third option is imposing “connection measures” that would let EirGrid and fellow system operator ESBN prioritize data centre connection applications based on several categories that would protect the supply of energy. This includes data centre operators reducing energy consumption when requested by EirGrid.  CRU considers the third option the most balanced and preferred option. “This option should allow the data centre industry to continue to connect in a manner which respects the overall system integrity while balancing the needs of the consumer to have a secure and stable supply of electricity,” the CRU said. According to the Irish Times, a data centre with a load of 60 MW would be comparable to the load usage of a large town/small city such as Kilkenny. More

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    What is 6G, if anything? A guide to what to expect, from whom, and when

    Frame from LeoTrack, a commercial low-earth orbit (LEO) satellite tracking service operated by Menlo Park, California-based LeoLabsIf there is to be a “6G Wireless,” its proponents will need to learn some significant lessons from the era of 5G. Already, 5G Wireless as a market strategy is four years old. The R&D divisions of telecommunications firms whose 5G rollouts are well under way, are now looking ahead to whatever the next version of wireless may be. . . or, at least, they’re trying to. So far, what they’re seeing may be a bit far out.

    “6G must deliver an outcome that is aligned with real needs,” remarked David Lister, Head of 6G Research and Development Technology at Europe’s Vodafone Group, “and deliver outcomes that are sustainable and commercially driven.” Lister was speaking at an annual conference called the 6G Symposium.  Yes, there is already an annual 6G Symposium.Why 6G is not a standard yetAnd yet there isn’t quite a 6G. Back in 1998, the leading stakeholders in global telecommunications formed the 3GPP consortium, to officially designate which technologies belong to a “G” and which don’t.  3GPP has yet to formally adopt any timeline for the development of anything called “6G Wireless.” Neither 3GPP nor any other industry group has endorsed or ratified any standard, set of standards, or placeholder for standards to come, with a “6” in it.  (Officially, 3GPP has scheduled dates for Release 18 of global standards, though the forthcoming Release 19 is presently slated for 5G.)  Theoretically, future releases beyond those the organization has already planned, could be designated “5G.” Possibly, though not as likely, 3GPP could stop designating its releases with any “G” at all — there’s no rule that there must be a “6G” or a “7G.”Nevertheless, major telecommunications equipment and service providers have hired or appointed 6G strategy leads and research chiefs, attaching “6G” to their job titles. Vodafone’s David Lister is just one example.These new 6G department heads may not all share a mutual purpose just yet. Certainly not all are presently 5G stakeholders. However, they do appear to share one common job function: articulating some facsimile of a desirable future — one where 5G may be comfortably discussed in the past tense.Vodafone’s David Lister”The traditional focus in generational networks has always been on the radio and the core,” continued Lister.  “5G broke that history. It started a transition towards more IT architecture, cloud-native, software-based networks. And I think, as we are increasingly in this IT domain going forward, we can expect future technologies to be introduced in an agile way, not necessarily encumbered by ten-years-generational thinking, but more incrementally, with regular feature improvements.”Are we already done with 5G?5G is not yet the success its stakeholders promised. Of all the bountiful transformations to business and culture to be brought forth by 5G, which we’re still being told are forthcoming, connection speed tops that list. And so long as 5G must co-exist with 4G LTE during the transition period, that promised speed just isn’t there today.

    Ranking a close second behind speed on that list of promises is functionality. A May 2021 report from Ericsson Consumer Lab [PDF] surveying more than 30,700 participants revealed that 7 of 10 respondents were dissatisfied with the lack of new and innovative apps and functionality made available by 5G. Among South Korean network users in particular, their general dissatisfaction with the launch of 4G in April 2012 (26 percent satisfaction) remains essentially unchanged following the launch of 5G seven years later (27 percent).A new “G” is supposed to be exciting. We’ve been promised transformational applications whose benefits we can not only immediately see, but feel. That excitement is supposed to directly translate into revenue. The more excited customers are about the network, the greater the revenue stream.But this has not actually happened. As Ericsson’s survey data indicates, not since Apple’s introduction of the iPhone — the culmination of 3G — has such a wellspring of excitement and enthusiasm ever materialized for the network. Should 6G become a thing, telcos cannot afford to simply repeat the 5G experience, and expect a different outcome.What to expect from 6G that would be any different  Stephen Douglas”One thing is clear: 6G is going to be an amalgam of complementary technologies, coming to deliver new sets of use cases and values,” remarked Stephen Douglas, head of 5G/6G strategy for UK-based network engineering firm Spirent Communications. On Douglas’ list: highly directional, “pencil-beam” antennas that receive terahertz-level frequencies for vastly greater data rates; transmitters whose capability of sensing the environments in their respective vicinities could enable sub-centimeter global radar; and wireless sensors implanted on users’ bodies, for what he calls body-area networks (BAN).Assuming any of this is even physically possible, this system — or something resembling it — would need to supplement 5G rather than replace it. For such a vision of 6G to become feasible, 4G will need to have been completely excised from telecom networks. The goals which would lead telcos to begin phasing out 5G, probably sooner than they’d planned, today tend to center around the following themes:Line-of-sight, free-space connections. Connecting every 5G base station to every other one in its vicinity, in a perfect mesh, using terrestrial fiber optic cable, is not possible.  5G has sought to address this obstacle by leveraging millimeter-wave communications (mmWave) to bridge backhaul gaps over difficult terrains. So far, however, successful trials of mmWave have been slow in coming. But a movement is under way to resolve these logistical issues, enabling lasers to beam line-of-sight (LoS) signals across terrestrial hops of just a few miles each, for connections where laying physical cable, and then maintaining it, wouldn’t be practical. And where LoS isn’t practical, engineers are working on synthetic mirrors that may act as passive reflectors, called reconfigurable intelligent surfaces (RIS) — metals that can change their own reflectivity characteristics when the weather changes.A reformed service model. It was 4G that gave rise to the idea that some of the network’s control and management functions could be shifted to a cloud platform — even a public cloud, if the security was there.  5G Multi-access Edge Computing (MEC) has popularized the idea that industry leaders can actually own and operate their own wireless networks, leading many (admittedly, those outside telcos) to speculate as to whether wireless network operation as a service could be a viable product, replacing and superseding Wi-Fi for major industries.Terahertz spectrum. Up until very recently, the popular belief has been that, because terahertz (THz) radio frequencies would be useless for broadcasters, they’d be useless altogether. But in recent years, and even weeks, researchers have discovered that highly directed beams no wider than a pencil can be steered along paths using passive reflectors (RF mirrors), ping-ponging from point to point for at least several hundred yards, and perhaps eventually miles.  6G advocates point to this discovery as a possible catalyst for launching research into “4D-video,” whose projections some say you should be able to smell and touch, as well as see and hear. Applications involving this much data, these advocates claim, would only be feasible through wireless links at frequencies hundreds or thousands of times beyond the gigahertz (GHz) spectrum currently being allocated to 5G.Artificially intelligent network adaptivity. Enterprise IT is already familiar with the concept of software-defined networking (SDN), in which virtual nodes are mapped to physical nodes so that functions and applications perceive only the networks they need to use. Academic researchers suggest that the performance levels required for high-priority applications such as real-time telemedicine, perhaps coupled with haptic communications (enabling, for example, remote surgery), can never be achieved with 5G as its practitioners envision it. A kind of virtual overlay may need to be “imprinted” onto the 5G network by way of SDN, and since we’re talking about the entire global network, the only way to achieve this practically may be through AI-endowed network proxies — a technology that would require 3GPP-directed integration.A redefinition of “communication” itself. In discussions around this objective, the word “teleportation” may actually be heard more frequently than you’d expect. Here, engineers are advocating in favor of communication systems that convey the full illusions of presence, so that people (however aided by electronic devices or headgear) may feel, touch, and even smell the subjects of their conversation. The bandwidths required for this level of “tele-presence,” they say, far exceeds what 5G could possibly provide for.The easiest route to a marketing theme for 6G, you’d think, would be to talk about more speed. That theme might work, if there were some history of speed improvement to back it up. Without an appreciable speed boost for 5G, extending the speed promise to 6G could look too much like kicking the proverbial can down the road, for the next generation to tackle. If there’s anything that stands in the way of truth, there’s its own stubborn veracity.So before they can begin building new technologies in earnest, the first 6G advocates are beta-testing narratives on their prospective customers, if you will, to see what fits and what doesn’t.Theme 1: Castles in the skyIn March 2019, the FCC adopted an order opening up a total of 21.2 GHz of radio spectrum, for unlicensed, experimental use, at frequencies ranging between 95 GHz and 3 THz. Until at least 2029, the Commission ordered, “innovators and entrepreneurs” would be given free and full access to these valuable patches of radio frequency, although famously, wireless and satellite providers disagreed as to whom the Commission was referring.As the world emerges from the pandemic to find its roads and bridges having crumbled some more, its lead water pipes more decayed, the roofs of its schools caving in, and neighborhood foundations resting on sewers whose pipes have already washed away, there’s more than a bit of skepticism over whether a new network of low-Earth-orbit (LEO) satellites should be considered a national infrastructure priority.The counter-argument being posed by the new 6G advocates is this: The wireless infrastructure we have, even with 5G, is woefully inadequate to support the applications we want.  Prof. Rahim Tafazolli”We need to realize the fact that we cannot provide ubiquitous coverage everywhere only by terrestrial means,” remarked Prof. Rahim Tafazolli, who heads the University of Surrey’s Institute for Communication Systems, speaking at 6G Symposium.  “We need to look seriously at low-Earth-orbit in a complementary fashion, not in a competitive fashion. The main challenge here is, can we provide direct access between satellite and user equipment — mobile phones?”Over the past decade, one of the most visible proponents of a global mesh scheme has been Samsung. Last year, Samsung began injecting new life in an otherwise old idea by attaching it to 6G.Way back in 2015, Samsung announced its interest [PDF] in building a constellation of some 4,600 LEO satellites, orbiting low enough to minimize signal latency, though not high enough to achieve geostationary orbit. Knowing full well that 5G was still in the embryonic phase of development, then-head of Samsung Research, Farooq Khan (now CEO of 5G security firm Exium) argued in favor of satellite-oriented mmWave as an alternative to fiber optic cable for high-capacity data backhaul — effectively “grounding” 5G in space. It’s a well-known fact, Khan asserted to folks who never knew this fact, that the propagation of signals in free space is about 1.4 times faster than through fiber cable.
    Samsung
    ×samsung-ntn-coverage-diagram.jpgRecently, Samsung began tying this LEO concept to a 6G-related initiative, calling LEO a “megatrend toward 6G.” In this diagram from its recent white paper, the company foresees high-altitude platform stations (HAPS), like signal-reflecting dirigibles, partnering with LEO to provide signal coverage in areas not supported by terrestrial base stations (BS). It’s a toned-down message from the 2015 edition, perhaps more aware of the fact that base station operators are telcos that are not willing just yet to give up control of their end-to-end coverage. Since LEO satellites move relative to the Earth, any network node that covers users at sea for any given hour, may cover users on land the next hour.If the world had a single 6G vendor — perhaps a state- or multi-nationally sponsored monopoly — this type of global configuration might not be a problem. As things stand, however, LEO satellites are not stationed high enough above the atmosphere to become geostationary. So the only way for an LEO operator (whether or not it’s affiliated with a telco) to operate an LEO network, would be for it to be given the freedom to claim the entire globe as its real estate. The only way to do that safely may be to lay claim to a narrow band of altitude, in a similar way to how a radio operator is granted claim to a frequency. In the absence of a global altitude-regulating agency, and with geodiplomacy between nations in the state it is today, any such claim, regardless of who makes it, won’t be granted much merit.So when would the skies become too cluttered for Samsung’s dream to be viable? An October 2020 NASA letter to the FCC suggests this has already happened. Objecting to the stated plans by a firm called AST & Science to build what it calls “the first and only space-based cellular broadband network to be accessible by standard smartphones,” NASA’s Commercial Space Transportation Interagency Group warned the private group’s satellites would be situated too close to a group of satellite constellations that NASA operates with partners, called the “A-Train.” The letter went on to claim AST’s constellation “contains extremely large satellites in a debris-rich orbital regime and will therefore experience a very large number of satellite conjunctions, certainly with debris objects and potentially with A-Train satellites themselves.”In saying so, NASA inadvertently revealed that space is already too cluttered even for its own operations. Space, in other words — at least, the space we really want for 6G — may be taken.Theme 2: A new business model for service providers”We often talk about going beyond connectivity,” remarked Aaron Boasman-Patel, vice president of AI and customer experience at telco industry consortium TM Forum, during a recent webcast produced by UK-based 6GWorld.  “What 5G and, then towards the end of the decade, 6G will teach us is, how important connectivity is as an underlying technology.”Boasman-Patel perceives 5G as a foundation for the formation of a kind of software and services market, which would itself be 6G. This upper-level market would function more like cloud services and IT, where vendors cohabit a space but tend not to own it end-to-end.”The hardest thing to understand, I say, is not necessarily the technology,” he continued.  “The technology is only one piece of the puzzle. You have to fundamentally change your operating and your business models, and say, how can the technology enable us to do that, as opposed to the other way around?”One configuration being discussed would enable much smaller organizations than telcos to become telco service providers in limited areas, and enterprise customers themselves to own patches of wireless coverage areas. Such a configuration would be an extension of the Multi-Access Edge Computing model currently under way for 5G, where companies with their own corporate campuses operate their own towers — giving them a way to replace limited-range Wi-Fi with longer-range, higher-bandwidth service.But if subdividing the network is the solution to putting high bandwidth in place, what would the incentive be for telcos to permit the wholesale subdivision, and subsequent conquering, of major portions of their own networks, using their own technologies?”I don’t think it’s as simple as it sounds,” remarked TM Forum’s Boasman-Patel, in response to this question from ZDNet. He continues:  Aaron Boasman-PatelFundamentally, what we’re saying is, CSPs [communications service providers] will probably own the connectivity. That is why they’re building out all of those services, and really focusing on having the best connectivity possible. If you speak to Verizon, that’s their number-one mantra; if you speak to Orange, their mantra; speak to Vodafone, that’s what they’re going to do. That is critical, because as I think we’ve seen now with COVID and different stages of people working from home, connectivity is the core of everything else. I think connectivity’s getting exciting, because people need the speeds. They want the guarantee of service.They will always own that connectivity. But where it becomes interesting is the applications that sit on top of it. I don’t believe that CSPs will own the edge in every single location, and be able to offer all those services. But what if we migrate to [an open model] where you can buy and provision a service, and you can share that edge capability? So in some areas where you’ve got stronger infrastructure, you can move those applications. . . between CSPs, to give you better coverage. That way, you’re getting revenue from your application, not having to build out infrastructure where it doesn’t make sense.(Note: We at ZDNet have historically used “CSP” as an abbreviation for “cloud service provider,” but among European telcos, the “C” stands for “communications.”)So in Boasman-Patel’s view, 6G could bring about a new business model where individual telcos drive “end-to-end” communications, as well as continue to maintain single customer accounts. In exchange, they’d need to be content with shortening the distances between one end and the other, and ceding control of the customer edges to a more IT-oriented marketplace, where the “C” stands for “cloud.”Theme 3: Supplementing or replacing microwave frequencies with terahertz”What 6G is not is a new business model,” stated Prof. Tafazolli.  “It is not 5G plus AI, it is not OpenRAN, it is not higher speed, and it is not more secure.  6G should bring new capabilities that 5G cannot deliver, and I believe [one example] is time synchronization.”The technology to which Prof. Tafazolli refers here, means more than just calibrating metronomes. He’s one of a growing group of engineers who foresee the possibility of a future network where radio waves — whose frequencies range between just below 6 GHz (the “sub-6” band) to at or near terahertz level (THz) — can be steered through metropolitan areas, from point to point, like ping-pong balls bouncing off metal pans in an obstacle course. The metal, in this case, would include an as-yet-theoretical concept for adapting the reflectivity of metal sheets in real-time, called reconfigurable intelligent surfaces (RIS). We could be talking about metal plates on the outsides of buildings or, in instances where beams are being steered indoors, literally reflective wallpaper.Imagine if the metal pans in this obstacle course could shift their angles ever-so-slightly to compensate for changing weather. RIS relays would need to do precisely this. But a functional RIS network would require millions upon millions of such surfaces, attached to buildings, windows, and skyscrapers. They could make the world look as though graffiti had been left everywhere by an alien species who communicated in QR codes. The collective movements of surfaces in any such network would require a level of orchestration never achieved before in human history. Thus, time synchronization. Technologies on the subatomic level of quantum processors may be called for here.×ris-surfaces-use-case-diagram.jpgA May 2021 paper [PDF] suggests that a completely passive RIS surface may be more effective (and obviously more energy efficient) at steering signals around physical obstacles, than the multi-antenna MIMO system implemented by 5G. Today’s MIMO can overcome the path loss suffered by 5G mmWave and even sub-6 signals, by packing very large antennas receiving multiple frequencies in very small spaces. But that process consumes tremendous power, which 5G was supposed to be saving. RIS would get around this problem through the use of metamaterials, capable of changing their own reflectivity in response to voltage changes in an underlying diode, triggering phase shifts. Those shifts are literally reflected in any signal that bounces off of them, enabling them to be tuned in real-time, according to changing environmental conditions.The IEEE researchers tout one foreseeable additional benefit to RIS: the ability to make high-frequency signals secure without the aid of digital or quantum cryptography, through the addition of artificial noise and phase transitions that a surreptitious listener, by virtue of being in a different location from the intended receiver (as fantastic as this sounds), would be unable to filter out.Theme 4: Overlaid network intelligenceEnabling this highly sensitive and dynamic system of signal exchange would inevitably require AI functionality beyond anything ever implemented in a communications network.  Researchers with St. Joseph Engineering College in Mangalore, India, are proposing that the required AI for 6G may be so extensive that AI should actually become the foundation of the entire network’s operations. In other words, 6G functions should reside on an AI platform, rather than the other way around.From a 2020 IEEE paper.×6g-ai-foundation-diagram.jpgIn this diagram from an IEEE paper by Profs. Jagadeesha Brat and Salman AlQahtani, 5G on the left is represented by some of the components in 5G New Radio (5G NR): Enhanced Mobile Broadband (eMBB), Massive Machine-Type Communications (mMTC), and Ultra-Reliable Low-Latency Communications (uRLLC). Picking up on 3GPP lower-casing its adjectives, Brat and AlQahtani pile on several new components of a theoretical 6G radio core on the right, adding ideas like “ultra-High Security” (uHS) and “ultra-High Sensing and Localization” (uHSLo), which in this case are suggestions rather than formal projects.The theme they convey may be prescient: Whatever 6G becomes, it’s more likely than not to subdivide into even more technology tracks. When that happens, they’ll all need something to bring them all together, and at least make them seem smart.On top of all this, remarked 6GWorld Managing Editor Alex Lawrence in a note to ZDNet, the intelligence built into any new wireless network will need to extend to all the devices linked into the network. That includes not only wireless phones, but wireless vehicles. Wrote Lawrence:Building security by design into a new network will be a first, and again will demand new approaches and probably business models. And then there are other things to think about as the physical world interacts with the digital one, such as ‘functional safety’ and resilience. That’s based on the assumption that no security is going to be 100% perfect forever, especially if you’ve got nationally vital elements being run through the network. Enemies of the state might love to hack, for example, all the autonomous vehicles in a country. Functional safety means designing the cars so that, even if they’re hacked, or even if they lose their connection, the car won’t just drive into a crowd or anything. And resilience means making sure that, if an attack shuts down one car, it won’t spread easily to other cars and it’s easy to get the attacked car up and running again.Theme 5: A whole new meaning to “headend”At this signpost, the wise man said, you cross over into the Twilight Zone.”What type of mobile devices will disrupt the wireless industry and drive beyond 5G wireless systems in the same manner that the iPhone and the IoT did?” reads an April 2020 white paper produced by IEEE senior and student members [PDF]. Submitted for your approval: Your brain, enhanced through the implanting of a bio-mechanical interface (BMI), within which are probes that make direct contact with the surface.×brain-to-brain-to-6g-link.jpgIEEE Senior Members Pedro Nardelli and Renan Moioli propose the creation of a truly neural network they call BTC. Without the real-world experiments to prove this just yet, they suggest the following: Once it becomes possible for base stations to achieve extremely high-frequency connectivity, the next natural progression may be to take biological devices that already generate natural signals at those frequencies, and interface them with the wireless network. The BTC team wrote:…The shift toward implants is further motivated by several emerging wireless services, such as immersive Extended Reality (XR) and BMI, in which the human body and brain become an integral part of the wireless service. In these services, it will soon become necessary to provide communication links among, not only machines (MTC) and human users (HTC), but also among the brains of different users. Hence, we foresee that BTC will be the next frontier in wireless connectivity… BTC links must be designed in a way to seamlessly connect a human brain to a wireless network and potentially provide two-way communication among the user’s brain implants and the various network and IoT devices. A unique feature of BTC links is that they will require the network to match the capabilities of the human brain — arguably the most powerful computer in the world.The apparent upshot here: Really cool games, for one. Next, of course, comes telepathy, linking brains not only with 6G routers and remote cameras, but other brains. One principal requirement, of course, would be “the most powerful computer in the world,” which immediately recalls scenes from a Douglas Adams novel.All this comes on the heels of efforts by 5G stakeholders, along with scientists, academics, and more than a few journalists, to debunk the myth that 5G sought to implant chips in your brain. Since there is no official 6G wireless standard, we can say for now the same holds true for 6G. There has always been an element of science fiction in any speculation about a future technology — for instance, the implication in any study of quantum entanglement that molecular transport may indeed be possible. Sometimes sci-fi is a useful tool, helping us rediscover where the borderlines of sensibility actually lie.What if there isn’t a 6G?Which leads us to this very relevant question. The stakeholders in wireless networks have a vested interest in maintaining control over the gateways through which their networks are accessed. We talk a lot about communications technology evolving to become more like information technology, where there are many more players in competitive fields, and no single vendor owns the customer. And we observe a variety of technologies on the horizon (most of them real) that provide evidence to that end.But each of these technologies would operate in different spaces, with space itself (outer space) being just one level. The edge, where processing and high-capacity storage takes place closer to the end customer, would be another space. And if fiber optic backhaul must co-exist with both microwave and terahertz line-of-sight relays, ownership of the data distribution network may be partitioned between at least three layers, each with its own supply chain and management scheme.All of this would render it much more difficult for telcos (the Verizons, Vodafones, and Oranges of the world) to claim “ownership” of the wireless customer. So why bother building an economy of scale if the builders themselves are out-scaled? Put another way, why bother with 6G at all?Oliver Korfmacher”I think the subscriber data itself, at least in 5G, at least for a given set of subscribers — say, residential — will remain in one database,” replied Oliver Korfmacher, Vice President for Technology and Telecoms for Stockholm-based telco cloud platform provider Enea, speaking to a 6GWorld panel.  “We’re currently harvesting the benefits from having a single, centralized data management, and we will not turn this away immediately.”In 6G, this might change,” Korfmacher pivoted.  “Very likely, we will see the partitioning of subscriber data between different vendors — [it] will be the next big thing.” Since 5G is built to support user equipment (UE) mobility and roaming (enabling one tower to pick up a signal when a phone moves out of range of a nearby tower), it makes sense to keep UE subscriber data centralized. For any system being envisioned as 6G, he believes, such centralization — which some might call “lock-in” — may not be as necessary.Since holding onto one’s customers remains key to the success of 5G Wireless strategy, 6G might very well co-exist with 5G after all. . . as its competitor.Stated Aaron Boasman-Patel:If we’re going to get to this multi-vendor landscape, we really have to start to understand, how do you componentize the network? Now, that’s never been done before. We spend a lot of time talking about the IT layer, about the interfaces on the radio access network. To make all of this work, we’ve got to ride the way down into the network, which hasn’t traditionally been opened up. There’s lots and lots of vendor lock-in on the network side, and lots of resistence to actually de-componentize that into the different network functions.We put the question to Prof. Henning Schulzrinne of Columbia University — the former CTO of the FCC.  Henning Schulzrinne”I do see that, for at least the foreseeable future, we already have several, and a probably increasing number of, communications standards tracks,” Prof. Schulzrinne told us.  “We’re going to have, currently, the carrier track — 5G from 3GPP, primarily, and related bodies. We’re going to have the enterprise version — largely still Wi-Fi, for the foreseeable future. That I don’t see going away. And increasingly, we’re having specialty networks like a WAN, and similar types of IoT-based, low-bandwidth, long-range, industrial-style networks that are more important, but niche networks, not general-purpose.”Some, perhaps all, of the goals engineers and academics foresee for their respective, bright futures, may happen anyway without either 5G or 6G. And that may be a good thing, if we resume the original concept of a “G” as 3GPP perceived it: the technological specification for the core and accessibility of the wireless network. There may not have to be a split or a chasm among stakeholders, believes Prof. Schulzrinne, if everybody would concentrate on their own respective projects. The professor continued:What I do see as an opportunity — and this is not guaranteed to succeed, is that we currently have a world where the Wi-Fi world and the carrier world are starting to converge, but still, they’re fairly different, so that a company has to make a choice. They’ll may go all-in on carrier-style technology like 5G for the enterprise. But you get the story. It’s still not a majority. It’s still hard to deploy. It requires a level of expertise in communication. You’re pretty much tied to a single vendor at that point — say, Nokia or Ericsson. It’s not well-integrated with enterprise management systems, because they’re designed as carrier-style systems. It’s not integrated with any existing Wi-Fi infrastructure, for a variety of practical and cost reasons. So I do see there is an opportunity — and this may be more of a 6G type of thing — to think more systematically about an architecture that can be scaled down, and more readily occupies the middle ground between a very basic, Wi-Fi access point architecture that we currently have in very small enterprises, and the carrier-grade, carrier-scale, 5G-ish style of architecture that we have.Schulzrinne perceives an opportunity for a radically simplified architecture to occupy this middle ground, between the Wi-Fi router and the 5G tower. Whoever seizes this opportunity, he believes, will need to either train, or be able to train, the managers of these mid-range communications networks. Here is where things get interesting: Do carriers have an interest in cultivating such expertise among their customers? Don’t they run the danger of sacrificing the very element of their service that justifies their premiums? Continues Schulzrinne:There’s a recognition that the carrier industry has to merge towards the enterprise architecture, as opposed to the opposite way. I see that as much more productive, simply because there’s just a lot more enterprise out there, than there is carrier out there, both in terms of numbers of people and numbers of deployed sites. I do see an opportunity there. But it’s too late to do that for 5G.

    [ZDNet acknowledges the superb work of 6GWorld, its managing editor, Alex Lawrence, and his colleagues who set up 6GSymposium and its associated panels.]Further Reading More

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    Samsung to supply open RAN and 5G solutions to Vodafone UK

    Samsung said on Monday that it has been selected as a vendor of open RAN, 4G and 5G solutions to Vodafone for the telco’s virtualized RAN (vRAN) deployment in the UK.The South Korean tech giant will supply its vRAN solutions and open RAN compliant radios, such as its massive MIMO, for both low-band and mid-band spectrum to the telco. 

    Networking

    This is the first time that Samsung is supplying its network kits to Vodafone, as well as its first deal with a large European mobile operator for 5G equipment. The company will also be the sole supplier of vRAN solutions. Other vendors for Vodafone’s rollout include Dell, NEC and Wind River.SEE: 5G smartphones: A cheat sheet (free PDF) (TechRepublic)Samsung said its vRAN solution is software-based and runs on commercial off-the-shelf servers, but offers features and performance that are level to that of traditional hardware equipment.The company said the solution is cloud-native and has a container-based architecture that will offer flexible deployment and efficient network management for telcos.According to Samsung, the vRAN’s architecture also has automation capabilities that simplify end-to-end network management. This will allow operators to quickly meet demands from new and existing services, with minimal impact on deployment, the company said.

    “Vodafone is committed to leading the next wave of digital transformation across Europe, ensuring fast and reliable connectivity for all,” Vodafone CTO Johan Wibergh said. “Open RAN, built on strong partnerships, is key to realizing this ambition. Samsung’s innovative solutions and expertise are part of the foundation that is creating this network of the future.”SEE: 5G smartphones have arrived. But for many, the reason to upgrade is still missingSamsung Network president Kyungwhoon Cheun said: “This is a major step forward, as more operators are transitioning into new RAN technologies to prioritize user experience and efficiency.”Samsung’s network business has been making inroads into major markets in recent years. In March, the company announced that it will be supplying its 5G kits to NTT Docomo, Japan’s largest mobile operator.In September last year, Samsung said it will be supplying $6.6 billion worth of network equipment to US carrier Verizon. More

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    ACMA sees 15% drop in total telco complaints even though they're taking longer to resolve

    Latest figures from the Australian Communications and Media Authority (ACMA) has indicated there was a 15% year-on-year drop in telecommunications complaints from 323,804 to 274,290 during the January to March 2021 quarter. Based on complaints per 10,000 services that also decreased by nearly 15% year on year from 74 to 63 during the period. Of the total complaints, about half were about mobile services, followed by NBN broadband at 67,005, while complaints about other services accounted for 43,332, fixed-line broadband for 12,007, fixed-line voice 10,498, and 2,341 were about NBN voice-only services. Breaking down the complaints related to NBN broadband further, one third — 23,553 — were about fibre to the node, 18,262 were about HFC, and 10,825 were in relation to fibre to the curb.
    Image: ACMA
    The data matches up with what the Telecommunications Industry Ombudsman reported earlier this month, which found there were 4,004 fewer total complaints year-on-year during the same January to March period.”Reports from the ACMA and the TIO continue to show decreasing complaint rates, underlining that telcos are improving customer service while deploying new technologies, increasing broadband speeds, and consistently offering more value,” Communications Alliance CEO John Stanton said. Despite a decrease in complaints, the latest ACMA telecommunications complaints data showed the weighted average days to resolve a complaint increased during the quarter by 7.5% from 9.3 to 10 days. The average telco took 5.5 days to resolve a complaint. One telco, which was the slowest, took 16 days to resolve a complaint.

    During the quarter, complaint escalation rates also rose by 1 percentage point from 9.8% to 10.8%, with a total of 29,533 escalated complaints recorded. The Communications Alliance attributed the slight increases to the possibility that given the significant decrease in overall complaint numbers, with fewer “quick to resolve” issues raising to the level of a complaint, it would mean consumers are seeing more straightforward issues resolved faster. “While there is still more work to be done and telcos will always continue working to improve customer experience, we are proud of the progress made thus far and hope to see this trend continue,” Stanton said. Related Coverage More

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    Skylo, Inmarsat team for first commercial narrowband IoT-over-satellite solution

    Each day, gazillions of tiny internet-borne communication instances ping around the internet in deference to the ones we most think about–those being messaging, web browsing, voice calls, video conferences and watching television. The wide range of lower-network-level yet important tasks in the internet of things include functions such as starting a car remotely, summoning an ambulance, sending a farmer an early storm warning or registering soil quality metrics from a faraway soybean field. These happen billions of times a day, and they can easily be taken for granted, but they’re all important to someone, somewhere.Palo Alto, Calif.-based startup Skylo, whose global IoT connectivity fabric software facilitates satellite-based narrow-band IoT communication services, specializes in these behind-the-scenes functions. The company made telecom news June 10 in announcing a partnership with UK-based Inmarsat, which has developed satellite-to-Earth communications software for more than four decades. The deal makes the world’s first commercial narrowband IoT-over-satellite solution a reality.Inmarsat will provide the satellite capacity backbone to deliver Skylo’s IoT packages internationally for connecting machines and sensors. Skylo will utilize existing Inmarsat satellites located in geostationary locations 35,000 kilometers in space.The deal pairs Inmarsat’s global satellite network with a Skylo IoT solution that provides remotely located application users with real-time, actionable data. This function fills in dead-area coverage gaps, improves efficiencies and can literally save lives in emergency situations, Skylo CPO and co-founder Tarun Gupta told ZDNet.”We had a situation last Thanksgiving off the coast of India, where a couple of boats were sinking,” Gupta said. “They were able to press the SOS button, which called back to the equivalent of the Coast Guard, and the Indian Coast Guard came out and saved their lives. So we’ve been actually able to save several dozen lives off the coast of India, and we’re really proud of that.”

    The Skylo solution is available now in India through a partnership with in-country partner BSNL. Expansion plans will be announced later this year, Gupta said.”Our software runs on satellites in the highest level in the atmosphere, the geostationary level,” Gupta said. “We provide a full-stack solution, starting from the CPU in the hardware device. We provide access to the network as well as the platform where the data resides. Our global partner, Inmarsat, provides that pipe connectivity to transport the data from, say, the middle of the ocean, back over satellite to where you want to go.”Global connectivity is rapidly expanding beyond people to connect billions of machines and devices, and geographic separation is becoming less of a problem thanks to fast improvements in bandwidth, power sources and next-generation narrow-band software, such as Skylo’s. Simultaneously, more and more IoT operations are requiring increasing always-available connectivity. Satellite IoT connectivity is changing how smart “things” are connected, enabling real-time data transmission and greater reliability and cost-effectiveness–particularly where there is inconsistent or no cellular coverage. “The most effective IoT solutions require a truly resilient and flexible network that can scale as demand grows,” Inmarsat CEO Rajeev Suri said in a media advisory. “Our L-band network provides a unique capability for enabling the billions of connected IoT devices in India and across the world that are being deployed at an extraordinary speed.”New deal with Softbank announcedSkylo also announced that it has signed an agreement with Japanese mobile carrier SoftBank Corp. to provide satellite communication services for internet-connected commercial devices. The agreement comes with a caveat: Softbank will charge only 10% of competing rates.SoftBank struck its alliance with Skylo late last month, after parent company SoftBank Group led a $103 million funding round for the startup in January. The goal is to launch an affordable network in Japan as early as next year. Boeing is also an investor in Skylo.The network also will serve areas that have insufficient coverage by base stations located on the ground.

    Internet of Things More

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    Wild weather sees Victorian NBN outages stretch into weekend

    Storm weather that pushed through Victoria this week has left behind power outages, homes destroyed, as well as a single fatality in its wake. Providing an update on its blog on Friday morning, NBN has continued to state that restoration could take days. “As at 8:00am on Friday 11 June, NBN Co has restored its infrastructure assets servicing approximately 54,000 premises in metropolitan areas of Melbourne, mainly in the city’s eastern suburbs,” it said. “As a result of impacts to other network infrastructure assets, approximately 75,000 NBN services remain affected across parts of the Greater Melbourne metropolitan area, Yarra Ranges, Gippsland, Gisborne, Ballarat, and small areas of other storm-impacted regions of Victoria. “It is likely that power restoration to some areas may take a number of days, which will delay the restoration of NBN services in these areas.” The company said many of its sites are running on battery backup systems, with generators deployed, and access restricted due to storms that swept through the state on Wednesday and Thursday. NBN added that power outages would impact whether it could restore services to premises.

    “NBN Co is working closely with power providers and Emergency Services in Victoria and will monitor the weather situation over coming days. It will continue to respond to network outages and is aiming to restore services as soon as possible,” it said. On Thursday morning, NBN said there were an estimated 200,000 premises across Victoria without power. Related Coverage More

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    Best Wi-Fi extender 2021: Boost your home office Wi-Fi

    Weak spots from a poor signal and dead zones can affect your online experience and overall productivity if you’re working or studying. After all, network interruptions and connection issues can distract you from the actual task at hand. Investing in the best Wi-Fi extender may be worth the cost. The right Wi-Fi extender expands your coverage area and frees you to work outside the router’s standard coverage range.  You may be pleasantly surprised to find out that the latest generation of best Wi-Fi extenders are fairly affordable and are capable of rebroadcasting speeds of up to 6Gbps. Several users within the network can simultaneously stream 4K/8K-quality media or play multiplayer games with no lag or buffering — even if it’s from an upstairs corner bedroom that used to suffer from connectivity issues. While the best Wi-Fi extender can dramatically cut down on weak signal issues, it relies on the quality of your router. The extender only rebroadcasts what’s available. If you’re in search of faster speeds, purchasing the latest extender with Wi-Fi 6 won’t work unless the router is delivering that speed. Luckily, most extenders are universally compatible and you can always upgrade your router to improve your home network’s performance. The following Wi-Fi extenders for home or office were chosen based on ease of setup, features, universal compatibility, price and performance. To lengthen their usage life, some of the best Wi-Fi extender devices that made the cut are future-ready, with Wi-Fi 6 for faster speeds, which is the next generation of wireless connectivity.

    Best overall

    Features: Wi-Fi 6, dual-band, Seamless Smart Roaming, four 1GB LAN portsRange: 2,500sq ft, 30 devicesPrice: $249.99If you’re in search of a robust Wi-Fi extender that handles a variety of devices, the Netgear Nighthawk EAX80 Wi-Fi Extender is the one. It’s the priciest one on the list, but the Netgear comes with features that rivals don’t offer. The EAX80 is optimized for all Wi-Fi 6 routers, providing the fastest form of wireless internet you can buy at this time. The dual-band technology can give you up to 6Gbps performance, which is ideal even for the heaviest-duty 4K/8K Ultra-HD streaming and multi-player gaming. As far as our picks for extenders go, the EAX80 is capable of delivering the fastest speeds. However, it needs to be said that if high speeds are important to you, upgrading your router may also be necessary. An extender will not improve your network’s speed — it can only work with what the router outputs. Set up is easy — Netgear claims it takes five minutes or less. Best of all, this Wi-Fi extender creates a mesh network. Mesh networks are an upgraded form of extenders that create one Wi-Fi network for your home or office instead of several smaller ones. This means that you can move around without getting disconnected, as would be the case with non-mesh extenders. You won’t even have to set up a new network — the Netgear EAX80 works with your current SSID name through its Seamless Smart Roaming function.

    $250 at Amazon

    Cheapest Wi-Fi extender

    Features: Wall plug-in, one LAN port, indicator lightsRange: 1,200sq ft, up to 25 devicesPrice: $29.99On the other side of the cost spectrum, you have the TP-Link RE230, our pick for the cheapest Wi-Fi extender. For $30 or less, you can get a solid device that rivals what more expensive Wi-Fi extenders can do.Set up is also simple. The extender works with nearly all routers, making it a modular solution when you need to extend range while traveling. Simply plug the device in at a wall outlet. Press the WPS setup button on your router and the button on the extender for about one second. You should see the RE230’s light change to a solid light that indicates the connection is a success. Perhaps the biggest challenge here is having a second party push on the RE230’s button at the same time if it’s located out of reach from the router, which it most probably will be. Once it’s paired, the RE230 will broadcast over its networks in 2.4 and 5GHz bands. The TP-Link RE230 doesn’t have Wi-Fi 6 compatibility (or the speeds that come with it), but for less than $30, you have a low-profile, easy-to-use Wi-Fi extender that gets the job done reliably. In fact, it’s so affordable you could add a couple of extras throughout your home or office to ensure a strong signal from some of the most Wi-Fi-challenged areas.

    $30 at Amazon

    Best compact solution

    Features: Dual-band, 1GB LAN port, Spot Finder technology, seamless roaming available with certain routersRange: Up to 10,000sq ftPrice: $89.99The Linksys RE7000 is small but powerful. It’s designed to extend your coverage up to an impressive 10,000sq ft. Next-Gen AC Wi-Fi and multi-user MIMO (Multi-User, Multiple-Input, Multiple-Output) technology make it easy for all devices to be connected at the same time without buffering or lag. In addition, the extender’s dual Wi-Fi bands of 5GHz and 2.4GHz can deliver combined speeds of up to 1.9Gbps. You would think that such a powerful extender would look like a large brick, but it actually plugs into a single power outlet. Setting up your RE7000 is easy. Push the connect button and let it sync to the router. Take advantage of the RE7000’s Spot Finder feature using your laptop or smart device, which helps you find the best place to plug the extender in, take care of dead spots and optimize performance overall.You can also count on seamless roaming with one caveat — it does not integrate with every router. To enjoy smooth Wi-Fi connections without the drop between networks when moving around, you would need to purchase a Linksys MAX-STREAM router. Otherwise, you may get disconnected once you’re out of the coverage area. It’s more of an inconvenience than a dealbreaker. If you’re disconnected for being out of range, find the strongest available Linksys extender network in the zone or reconnect to the router. You may only have to do it once — most devices nowadays can remember networks and connect automatically once you’re within range.

    $90 at Amazon

    Best for obstructions and thick walls

    Features: Dual-band, 2GB LAN ports Range: 5300sq ftPrice: $109.99Sometimes size isn’t the issue; the building is the problem. Some homes and offices feature thick concrete walls or structures such as steel stairways or large columns that wreak havoc on a network’s signal strength. You may need a powerline adaptor to get Wi-Fi to the furthest corners or around a major structure.Powerline adaptors send signals through existing electrical wiring instead of the air. Netgear’s is fast — it offers Gigabit speeds to ensure that multiple devices, gaming and 4K HD streaming all happen lag-free. It’s built with an electrical outlet on the front of the plug-in device, so you don’t sacrifice the limited power outlets in a room. And it’s noise filtered, so it does not affect connectivity speeds.The only drawback is the wired nature of this solution. You may finally get connectivity in areas that seemed impossible before, but you would need to connect the device that needs a signal through one of the two high-speed Ethernet ports. Fortunately, most smart TVs, games consoles and computers have an ethernet port. However, you may not be able to connect your smart devices or newer-generation Macbook. 

    $110 at Amazon

    Best for seamless roaming

    Features: Dual-band, Seamless Smart Roaming, 1 0/100/1000 gigabit Ethernet portRange: 1,500sq ft, up to 25 devicesPrice: $89.99Range extenders do a great job of expanding your network’s reach. However, you may have to connect to different SSIDs as you move throughout the coverage area. A mesh network system eliminates the extra “EXT” networks and handles the transition smoothly behind the scenes by routing your connection as needed.D-Link’s Wi-Fi Mesh Range Extender expands your network as soon as you plug it into an outlet and pair it with your router. For a seamless experience that allows you to move within the range without disconnecting, you’ll need to use a D-Link router. Considering how popular they are, you may already have one, although you may want to upgrade to some of D-Link’s latest, which include 6G Wi-Fi connectivity, such as the EXO Smart Mesh Wi-Fi Router.The small extender’s dual-band technology is compatible with older wireless devices that operate on 2.4GHz. For newer devices, 5G delivers the fastest speeds. The DIR-LIX1870’s Wi-Fi speeds are as much as 300Mbps in the 2.4GHz band and 1,733Mbps on 5GHz). In addition, you can plug your wired device into the Gigabit Ethernet port. Plus, the extender is compatible with voice control, so you can conveniently use Alexa, and Google Assistant commands to manage it.

    $90 at Amazon

    Easiest to set up

    Features: Dual-band, two high-gain antennas, Wi-Fi 6, 2GB Ethernet port, OneMesh router compatible, connection strength indicator lightRange: 1,500sq ft, up to 30 devicesPrice: $99.99The RE605X is one of the simplest and most effective Wi-Fi extenders available at the moment. Plus, it’s Wi-Fi-6 ready to match the speeds your router is capable of delivering. If you’re a heavy 4K/HD streaming user, the adjustable, high-gain antennas can hit up to 1.8Gbps thanks to 5GHz AX and 2.4Ghz AC dual bands. Installation is quick. Plug it in somewhere near a dead zone or area with dismal connectivity and adjust the antennas to improve signal strength. You will know when you hit the right spot based on the signal strength light. The range extender is compatible with all routers, Wi-Fi-enabled devices and access points including the latest-generation AX devices. In addition, you can set up a seamless home system by adding a OneMesh-compatible router. When you do, you can roam without worrying about disruptions to your signal.

    $100 at Amazon

    Best router/Wi-Fi extender in one

    Features: Dual/tri-band combination, 2GB LAN connectors per extender, three-pack bundleRange: Up to 5,000 square feetPrice: $350We round off the best Wi-Fi extenders with an all-in-one solution that works as a router, extender and mesh network. Although many individuals already have a router they own or lease through their internet provider, those looking to upgrade their home or business completely should look at this bundle. It comes with a router and two extenders which can be set up in opposite areas of the home or location. Wireless mesh networking can be complicated since the router and extenders need to play well together to deliver connectivity wherever you may be seamless. Linksys simplifies the process by providing a free iOS or Android app that can help you set up the Velop mesh network in just a few minutes. Connect the router, plug in the extenders in an area with poor connectivity and link the devices or nodes through the app. Once it’s all set up, you can move around without manually connecting to the extender’s network for the zone. The process happens automatically behind the scenes, so you can focus on surfing or streaming without worrying about dropping off a network and searching for a new one.

    $350 at Amazon

    How does a Wi-Fi extender work?

    A Wi-Fi extender works as a relay or middle man between your device (a smartphone, TV,  game console or computer) and the router. It receives the internet signal from the router and broadcasts it further along, expanding how far you can access your internet connection. Wi-Fi extenders are useful in larger homes or workspaces or when you want to add internet connectivity outdoors.

    Do Wi-Fi extenders work with any router?

    Most of the best Wi-Fi extenders are universally compatible, meaning they work with nearly any router. However, older routers may be slower. It could be worth upgrading to a newer-generation model for an improvement in range and speed, even before you add the extender. Keep in mind that while most extenders work with most routers, your connection could drop in and out as you move through range zones. To avoid the inconvenience of a temporary disconnection, choose an extender with smart seamless roaming from the same brand as your router. 

    What’s the difference between mesh Wi-Fi and a Wi-Fi extender?

    A Wi-Fi extender simply rebroadcasts your signal further away from the router itself. They essentially boost your coverage to areas that typically don’t have coverage because they are too far from the router to receive a stable signal. However, to achieve this, you may need to connect to the extender’s own network. This means that if you want to move back and forth, you may need to connect and disconnect from the router’s SSID and the extender’s. Although it’s a small inconvenience, you may want to set up a Wi-Fi mesh. Mesh Wi-Fi connects multiple devices into one seamless network. Instead of having several networks comprised of the router and each extender, you have one. As you move about, your devices will connect to whatever “node” is available seamlessly and without disruptions.

    Can I have more than one Wi-Fi extender on my network?

    You can connect as many Wi-Fi extenders as you need to a single router. However, extenders need to link to the router itself. Daisy-chaining, which means one extender is connected to the router and the rest connect to a subsequent extender may not work as effectively. If you’re dealing with a very large space, you are better off buying an extender with a powerful range instead of daisy-chaining several lower-range versions together. 

    Where do I put a Wi-Fi extender?

    You can use a Wi-Fi extender anywhere you need a signal boost. It could be the bedrooms on the second floor of a home or an outdoor area where you like to work from. Most models will have suggestions in the manual of where best to place the extender. Some extenders, such as the Linksys RE7000 even help you find the right place. In general, position the extender halfway between the dead zone and router.

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