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Article Summaries:

  • What’s behind the widespread adoption of extremely high-throughput wireless. Wi-Fi 7 has been a staple in high-end applications such as notebook computers and AR/VR glasses for the past couple years, where high-speed connectivity and low latency are essential. Known alternatively as IEEE 802.11be, and Extremely High Throughput Wi-Fi, it is starting to migrate downstream into IoT devices such as smart door locks, thermostats, and robotic vacuum cleaners. But the reason is less about how fast a single device can connect to the internet and other devices, and more about how many devices can conne
  • Wi‑Fi 7, officially IEEE 802.11be, is expanding beyond high‑end laptops and AR/VR gear into everyday Internet‑of‑Things (IoT) devices such as smart locks, thermostats and robotic vacuums. The shift is driven not by the speed of a single connection but by the standard’s ability to support many devices simultaneously, thanks to new multi‑band management and advanced capacity‑sharing features. Infineon’s senior vice president of Wireless Product Line, Sivaram Trikutam, explains how Wi‑Fi 7’s architecture allows vendors to allocate bandwidth efficiently across numerous IoT endpoints, improving overall network performance.

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