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Etc. But, I don't want to FORCE you to buy capabilities that youThen I buy a phone that can support 802.11ac Wave2 with 160 MHz channelIt's almost like "the base" isn't what you want then.>
[...]
Which is why you toss in an 802.11ax AP (or 802.11ac, if the ax units
are prohibitively expensive for your house/office/whatever), and leave
it up to the client device to negotiate for the best common option.
And, when you want to pass a gigabit of data to the phone each second,
how does that AP help the phone GET the data when the pipe TO THE HANDSET
is considerably narrower?!
width, and at least 3x3 spatial streams. Assuming, of course:
- that the AP supports those minimum requirements as well, AND
- The conditions allow for negotiation of MCS8 (~2300 mbps link rate,
ballpark 1gpbs sustained data rate, but WiFi math is "fun") AND
- There aren't other devices also requesting airtime (especially ones
using slower options -- 2x2 streams, 802.11n, MCS5, etc.) AND
- The server has enough bandwidth (incl. read buffers, disk I/O, etc.)
to sustain that 1gpbs transfer to my phone.
- The phone has enough bandwidth (incl. write buffers, "disk" I/O,
etc.) to sustain a 1gbps transfer from the server.
Or, I don't use WiFi (to a phone or otherwise) because if I *need*Then you're stuck with a cable.
1gpbs, then a wire's gonna give me that without any of the conditions
imposed by half-duplex radio communications.
I WANT TO KNOW WHAT SET OF WiFi CAPABILITIES I CAN EXPECT FROMIt's almost like the whole reason I've repeatedly asked "what do youIt's not like an 802.11ax AP doesn't support a/b/g/n/ac ...>
You're missing the point, completely.
*REALLY* want to know" is because your question is vague.
- If you're building some form of WiFi access point --> who cares,Or, unless you control the environment that the phone is operating in.
the phone will negotiate with the AP for the best common mode
between them given local conditions (e.g. 802.11n @ MCS2)
- If you're building some form of application that needs some minimum
data rate --> you can't really guarantee you're going to get that
rate, unless it's less than 1Mbps (802.11a/b/g) or MCS0
(802.11n/ac/ax; exact rate varies depending on available spatial
streams).
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