The global semiconductor shortage strikes again, but this time, it’s not GPUs that are in the headlights, but Wi-Fi 6E components. A new report from Dell’Oro (via Tom’s Hardware), states that Wi-Fi 6E adoption has been severely hampered by supply chain issues.
A summary of the report states: “Although manufacturers launched Wi-Fi 6E products in mid-2021, products are either not available, or they are in very limited supply. Supply constraints have prompted manufacturers to focus on enabling the availability of popular models by re-designing these models with components that are more readily available,” said Tam Dell’Oro, Founder, CEO and wireless LAN analyst.
The report goes on to state “Ecosystem players do not see constraints easing until the end of 2022. With Wi-Fi 7 products shipping as early as 2023, we predict users will bypass 6E”.
Well, there's a big prediction!
Wi-Fi 6E support is commonly found in high end PC motherboards, laptops and smartphones. However, Wi-Fi 6E routers are not widely available, and those that are are either expensive or in low supply. There's also the issue of inconsistent and very slow governmental approvals of 6GHz band access. All of this is preventing widespread adoption when compared to Wi-Fi 6.
Wi-Fi 7, also known as 802.11be certainly looks promising. It introduces several key improvements and technologies that aim to make Wi-Fi connections faster and more reliable, with greater coverage and lower latency.
Final ratification of the standard is not expected before 2024, but development is well underway. MediaTek has demonstrated prototype hardware that “can achieve the maximum speed defined by IEEE 802.11be”. That’s currently at least 30Gbps, which is three times as fast as Wi-Fi
Read more on pcgamer.com