Archive for wi-fi

Data Centers To Go Wireless

WiFi radio waves MIT’s Technology Review reports researchers from IBM (IBM), Intel (INTC) and the University of California, Santa Barbara have come up with a way to improve data transmission in data centers. Heather Zheng, associate professor of computer science at UCSB who led the research says wireless is the answer to the in-rack cabling mess usually found in data centers. In their paper (PDF), the researchers say that transmitting data wirelessly within a data center would be simpler than rewiring data for tech titans like Google (GOOG), Facebook or Twitter.

The previous challenge for multi gigabit wireless in the data center was it required a line-of-sight connection to be useful. Achieving the required data center speed could not happen in the maze of metal racks, HVAC ducts and electrical conduits that make up most data centers.

TR reports that the researchers solution is to bounce 60-gigahertz Wi-Fi signals off the ceiling, which could boost data transmission speeds by 30 percent. Stacey Higginbotham at GigaOm points out that this could result in data transfers up of to 500 Gigabits per second. She says current Ethernet cables in data centers are generally 1, 10 or maybe 40 gigabits per second.

Ms. Zheng and colleagues used 60-gigahertz Wi-Fi, which has a bandwidth in the gigabits-per-second range and was developed for high-definition wireless communications according to TR. However, it has its limitations, says Ms. Zheng. To maximize the bandwidth and reduce interference between signals, it needs to be use 3D beamforming to focus the beams in a direct line of sight between endpoints. “Any obstacle larger than 2.5 millimeters can block the signal,” she says in the TR article.

Data center ceiling WiFi

Technology Review

One way to prevent the antennas from blocking each other would be to allow them to communicate only with their immediate neighbors, creating a type of mesh network. But that would further complicate efforts to route the data to the proper destinations, Professor Zheng told TR. Bouncing the beams off the ceiling directly to their targets not only ensures direct point-to-point communication between antennas but also reduces the chances that any two beams will cross and cause interference. “That’s very important when you have a high density of signals,” she says.

Flat metal plates placed on the ceiling offer near perfect reflection. “You also need an absorber material on the rack to make sure the signal doesn’t bounce back up,” says Ms. Zheng.

According to Technology Review the UCSB team worked with Lei Yang from Intel Labs in Oregon and Weile Zhang at Jiao Tong University in Xi’an, China, to simulate a 160-rack data center to see how the system might work. “Our simulation shows that wireless can add 0.5 terabytes per second,” she says.

IBM is also looking into using  wireless technology in data centers, Scott Reynolds, a researcher at IBM’s T.J. Watson Research Center in Yorktown Heights, NY, who has been developing 60-gigahertz systems told TR. “These data centers are just choked with cables,” he says. “And so every time you want to reconfigure one it’s very labor intensive and expensive.” But one problem with turning to wireless transmission, he adds, is that “you need to have hundreds of these wireless data links operating in a data center to be useful.” Since 60-gigahertz Wi-Fi has only four data channels, it’s important to configure the beams so they don’t interfere with each other.

Mark Thiele, the EVP of data center technology at Switch CommunicationsSuperNAP data center, told GigaOm that the research is worth following as low-latency networking inside the data center can be a bottleneck today for applications that range from financial trading to trying to move gigantic data sets around.

TR reports Ms. Zheng and her colleagues are now working on building a prototype data center to put their solution into practice.

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Having just done a small data center cleanup, the idea is appealing. We pulled out 2 generations of cabling, IBM Type 1 and a bunch of Cat 3 multi-pair out from under the deck.

Ms. Higginbotham says the choice of 60 GHz for the data center a smart move. Intel is pushing 60GHz for consumer use, under the WiGig brand (I wrote about WiGig in 2010 here). This means the chips would be cheap. Some of the possible security issues raised by running Wi-Fi in data center are tempered by using the 60Ghz range. She says if you are worried about someone standing outside the data center trying to eavesdrop on the data you are transmitting the 60Ghz, signals deteriorate rapidly.

Of course, change is hard and data center guys are going to have to learn wireless and top of rack switches would have to get radio cards installed. The Wi-Fi reflective panels would have to be installed on the ceiling of the data center and the servers would need signal-absorbing surface so the Wi-Fi signals don’t continually bounce around the data center.

Just in case you are confused about WiGig, Wi-Fi and IEEE, EETimes says, “WiGig forged a deal with the Wi-Fi Alliance so its 60 GHz approach can be certified as a future generation of Wi-Fi. The group has aligned its technical approach with the existing IEEE 802.11ad standards effort on 60 GHz.”

Now if only they could do wireless electricity……..

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Tweets from Outback coming in ’11

The Subaru Outback  is now offering wireless connectivity with Autonet Mobile in-car Internet service for 2011. CNET’s CarTech blog says that the Outback is the latest vehicle to feature built-in Internet connectivity.

A Subaru press release extols the benefits of the new service, “Subaru Mobile Internet easily allows users to check e-mail, surf the Web or listen to Internet radio and even stream video and post to social networking sites.” They further point out that users can do revolutionary things like  “… check weather and traffic, download hiking trails, and even reserve a campsite…” Finally Subaru reminds the reader that the service is designed for passengers while the car is in motion.

The Autonet Mobile service in the 2011 Outback will be a $499 option, plus a $35 activation fee and $29 monthly subscription. CNET reports it’s a 3G connection and can handle up to 10 users in a range of about 150 feet.

Autonet Mobile is also available on General Motors products like  some Cadillac and Chevy vehicles including:

  • Equinox
  • Traverse
  • Silverado
  • Tahoe
  • Suburban
  • Avalanche
  • Express

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In-car Wi-Fi doesn’t seem to have the same appeal it once held. Fast cellular data connections and 3G cards for laptops, has stolen in-car Wi-Fi and the Autonet product seems like a weaker competitor of Ford’s Sync service. Ford’s Sync is a multimedia system in partnership with Microsoft which can hook up to a USB modem.

More WLAN Legal Wrangling

The wireless patent wars wage on. Ericsson, (NASDAQ : ERIC) the Swedish telecommunications giant has filed suit in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Texas against a number of companies for alleged patents infringement of its IEEE 802.11 wireless products reports CENS.com. CENS.com says the businesses named  in the Ericsson’s lawsuit include:

The CENS.com article says the lawsuit involves all WLAN (wireless local area network) devices either incorporating chipsets supplied by:

or OEM products made by:

Tech Connect reports that Ericsson claims, the companies named are offering products that violate one or more of the following WLAN patents (number/title):

  • 6,466,568 – ‘Multi-rate radiocommunication systems and terminals’
  • 5,771,468 – ‘Multi-purpose base station’
  • 6,519,223 – ‘System and method for implementing a semi reliable retransmission protocol’
  • 6,330,435 – ‘Data packet discard notification’
  • 6,772,215 – ‘Method for minimizing feedback responses in ARQ protocols’
  • 6,424,625 – ‘Method and apparatus for discarding packets in a data network having automatic repeat request’
  • 6,173,352 – ‘Mobile computer mounted apparatus for controlling enablement and indicating operational status of a wireless communication’
  • 5,987,019 – ‘Multi-rate radiocommunication systems and terminals’
  • 5,790,516 – ‘Pulse shaping for data transmission in an orthogonal frequency division multiplexed system’

Ericsson requested the infringing companies to compensate its losses and asked the court to ban the sales of the infringing products. D-Link told CENS.com they cannot give any comment, because the company had not received any file from the court. But it will not affect the sales of its products.  Acer, told CENS.com that its legal department had received the related notice and has started judicial procedures.

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I have covered other WLAN patent suits here and here. While I’m no patent lawyer, what this says to me is that the WLAN market is starting to level-off and firms are looking for “other” ways to make some money without producing products. A business tacit fresh from the 1980′s.

I also noticed that this suit between a European firms (Ericsson) and Asian firms (Acer, Netgear and D-Link) was brought in U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Texas. This seems to be a favorite place for firms to sue each other, I wonder if  anyone has ever investigated why this court is so popular for alleged patent-troll cases.

One of the things that we instituted a while ago, in our RFP’s and contract’s is a clause that requires the VAR and the manufacturer to hold the end-user harmless in regards to patent suits the VAR or manufacturer may get entangled in.

Aussies Strike Again

Australia’s national science agency, the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization  (CSIRO), has filed suit in the US District Court in Texas again. The Aussies have  slapped AT&T, (NYSE:T) T-Mobile and Verizon (NYSE:VZ),with patent lawsuits according to an article on :Rethink Wireless. The Australian science agency, perhaps emboldened by its settlements over Wi-Fi patents with the likes of  Hewlett-Packard and Microsoft is now going after the leading U.S. retailers.

According to the article this is a lucrative business, for CSIRO which brought in about $205m in royalties in 2009, largely because of a massive out of court settlement, with a group of 14 vendors including Microsoft, Intel, Dell, Toshiba and HP (which I wrote about here).  According to CSIRO’s annual report, this settlement helped turn its budgeted deficit of $34.2m in that period into a profit of $122m. The CSIRO now claims 161 active patent licensees, many connected to the patent issued in 1996, which it says is included in all 802.11 Wi-Fi products.

In the article, Nigel Poole, executive director in charge of commercialization at CSIRO says this is a deliberate plan, “There’s a legal strategy here that has been thought through very carefully and to a lay person it looks like a pincer movement. You’ve got court action CSIRO says its proceeds from royalties are invested in new research, and presumably that could lead to new patents and licensing claims.”

Broadcom and Atheros have counter-sued CSIRO on the behalf of the Wi-Fi industry to have the patent declared invalid.

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Seems the Australians have gotten pretty good at patent trolling. Maybe they can build their entire broadband infrastructure on the backs of U.S. consumers to bad the U.S. government didn’t think of this first.

This should be a big test for AT&T who is testing Wi-Fi data offload for smartphone users by creating  a giant pilot Wi-Fi hotzone in New York City’s Times Square that will offer its mobile broadband customers free access.  It is widely believed that after pilot,   AT&T  may deploy more hot-zones in other areas across the country.

Many of AT&T’s smartphones support auto-authentication at AT&T Wi-Fi Hot Spots, making it automatic for subscribers to connect to its 21,000 hot-spots.  AT&T’s Ralph de la Vega has indicated in the past that offloading data traffic onto Wi-Fi would play a large role in curbing its overwhelming data growth.

Wi-Fi on Wheels

Chevrolet has announced that owners of several new models can turn their rides in a mobile hot spot with Chevrolet Wi-Fi by Autonet Mobile . This option enables full Internet access inside the vehicle and up to a 150 feet radius around the vehicle.  Chevrolet Wi-Fi is designed for use by passengers, or by the driver when the vehicle is parked. The system requires no special software and achieves speeds up to 1.5 Mbps.  The Chevrolet Wi-Fi internet connection can support up to 10  devices at once, enabling multiple passengers to use the connection for their separate devices.

“Chevrolet Wi-Fi by Autonet Mobile enhances commuting, family vacations and work,” says Chris Rauser, Chevrolet Accessories Manager. “It benefits active families on the go, as well as professionals who need immediate information at remote job sites. Its uses are almost endless.” San Francisco-based Autonet Mobile  is the world’s first Internet service provider designed exclusively for vehicles. As a GM Officially Licensed Product, Chevrolet Wi-Fi by Autonet Mobile is certified to work with the following new Chevrolet models:

  • Equinox
  • Traverse
  • Silverado
  • Tahoe
  • Suburban
  • Avalanche
  • Express

According to Autonet, the system uses 3G EVDO/2.5g 1xRRT wireless from Novatel Wireless for connectivity and its own patent-pending TRU technology to maintain Internet connections over the 3G network while the vehicle is in motion. TRU technology maintains the persistent link, even when 3G coverage is sparse. IEEE 802.11b-a-g provide data link protocols along with one built-in Ethernet LAN port provides wired connectivity. Its transport protocols include  PPTP, L2TP, IPSec and  PPPoE along with S NMP for remote management.  Security and access control are provided via  WEP/WPA/WPA2 encryption. Additional docking stations are available, enabling customers to easily move the Chevrolet Wi-Fi by Autonet Mobile router from vehicle to vehicle.

Through Dec. 31, Chevrolet Wi-Fi is available for $199 ($399 retail price, less $200 mail-in rebate with two-year service agreement). Go to GMextras.com for more information.

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Now a soccer-mom in her mini-van picking up Happy Meals will have more connectivity options than some of my clients.

Happy New Year

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