How It Works Wi-Fi 6 – Next Gen Connectivity
MacFormat UK|April 2020
The latest wireless networking standard is set to bring many benefits
Carrie Marshall
How It Works Wi-Fi 6 – Next Gen Connectivity

Wi-Fi 6 is the next generation of wireless internet, and we’re happy about that for two reasons. First of all, it’s faster and has more capacity. And secondly, it means that the Wi-Fi Alliance has finally got the hang of giving things sensible names. Well, nearly: technically Wi-Fi 6 is really Wi-Fi Certified 6™, but we’re just going to ignore that.

A trip to the AirPort

Let’s go back to 21 July 1999. Steve Jobs is passing an iBook through a hula hoop to demonstrate that the Mac is connected to the internet, without a cable, thanks to the magic of ‘AirPort’.

AirPort was Apple’s name for the 802.11b Wi-Fi standard, a technology for establishing wireless connections between devices via radio waves. The numbers tell you what international standard you’re talking about and the letter(s) show the version of that standard. 802.11b was the first Wi-Fi standard to go mainstream. It used the 2.4GHz radio frequency, which was already crowded with cordless phones and baby monitors, and it had a peak data transfer rate of 11Mbps. Nobody got anywhere close to that: real-world speeds were affected by your distance from the router, the number of devices you were connecting and if there was anything metal between you and the router. It wasn’t particularly fast, but it was incredibly convenient and Wi-Fi became a smash hit.

Since then we’ve had multiple iterations. 802.11b was supplanted by 802.11a and g, which delivered faster data rates, and then 802.11n, which also used the 5GHz frequency and added MIMO (Multiple Input Multiple Output) tech to support multiple aerials for better, faster coverage. The most recent version most of us have used is 802.11ac, published in late 2013, which delivered really fast connections alongside better capacity.

This story is from the April 2020 edition of MacFormat UK.

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This story is from the April 2020 edition of MacFormat UK.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.