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Sin
05-20-2013, 03:32 PM
hink your network is fast? Getting a gigabyte-sized movie over your local wireless network to your hard drive in a few seconds is old hat. Now there’s a network that can push a 2-hour, high-definition movie to a computer a mile away in less time than it takes to read a single word.

At the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology in Germany, a new record has been set: 40GB per second over a distance of about .6 of a mile. That’s like sending 10 high-def feature films.

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What makes this possible is a combination of better hardware and the use of higher radio frequencies, in this case, 240 gigahertz.That hardware is a set of chips developed at Karlsruhe that can process signals at higher frequencies. Higher frequencies mean smaller components, since a shorter wavelength can be picked up by a smaller antenna (which is why FM and AM radios need relatively large antennas, while Wi-Fi receivers can use small ones). These chips were only a few millimeters on a side.

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The high frequencies are necessary for moving lots of data — the number of bits that can travel over the airwaves is inversely proportional to the wavelength. The shorter the wavelength, the more data that can go in a given time.

A Wi-Fi network operates at 2.4 or 5 GHz, and tens of megabytes per second is not uncommon. Smartphones on the latest networks work at frequencies somewhat below that, and it’s no accident that they struggle to hit 10MB per second.

At some high frequencies moisture in the air can cause the signal to fade, but 240 GHz seems to be in a sweet spot where there’s little interference from moisture. Since transmissions can go much further than a Wi-Fi router can manage, there’s a possibility this type of transmitter would work well for rural areas where laying down fiber-optic cable — the gold standard of transmission speed — is too expensive to justify.

Image: The high frequency chip developed by the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology. Credit: Karlsruhe Institute of Technology/Sandra Iselin/Fraunhofer IAF

Source: http://news.discovery.com/tech/gear-and-gadgets/wi-fi-network-breaks-speed-record-130517.htm

NKN
05-20-2013, 08:04 PM
wow...I need that

Wetish
05-20-2013, 08:17 PM
Cmon Google Fiber. Step your game up.

Hazzah
05-21-2013, 01:49 AM
Most computers cannot read or write at 40gb/s atm, so what is the point? While it would be nice to get even Google Fiber, I couldn't possibly even use it all.

acow
06-04-2013, 01:59 AM
Most computers cannot read or write at 40gb/s atm, so what is the point? While it would be nice to get even Google Fiber, I couldn't possibly even use it all.

what's the point??
probably because computers are quite likely to continue getting better....?
-.- I think it's clearly evident what the point of having better transfer speeds lol, especially since in almost all cases that's a limiting factor.

grats
06-04-2013, 02:11 AM
distance wise, sure it's ridiculously fast.. but not the fastest :)

there's even a standard for 240ghz & 60ghz for a while now

one thing you have to remember about wireless is it is a hub like environment.. not a switch-like.. thus in order to communicate at full speed, a wireless device needs to be the only one on a line

just like a 1gbps hub, a 1gbps wifi connection is halved if two machines are going at the same time, and it continues to get worse & worse

unlike our wired switched environments where a 1gbps switch will handle 1gbps connection on any amount of machines, simultaneously

though it isn't really considered wifi (since it isn't radio waves) we've had data transferred wirelessly using lasers.. at insane speeds, this would be good especially when people start to go to mars and live there

l6bustank
06-04-2013, 04:51 PM
this is boss. Expand that to Eastern and Northern Europe and you will see the Baltic sea becoming a pirate's cove :p