While your internet service provider can no longer charge you a fee for using your own Wi-Fi router, if you’re like many subscribers, you probably still fork over $5 or $10 per month anyway. It’s true that there are a few benefits to renting over buying your own router or mesh system, including not having to worry about compatibility or obsolescence.
Now, you can now add Wi-Fi 7 to that list of benefits. With the official capabilities of the new bleeding-edge wireless standard still being hashed out, many companies have already begun launching Wi-Fi 7 products, including Qualcomm, which on Wednesday teased a new Wi-Fi 7 ISP gateway that it says will be available starting next summer to select fiber internet customers.
The new gateway has all the features you’d expect from a high-end wireless router. These include the ability to operate simultaneously on the 2.4GHz, 5GHz, and 6Hz bands, the latter of which is reserved for Wi-Fi 6E and soon Wi-Fi 7 devices. It also includes support for 320MHz channels and has a maximum throughput of 33 gigabits per second (Gbps) across all bands.
Compare those specs with a mainstream Wi-Fi 6 router, which only operates on the 2.4GHz and 5GHz bands, and is typically limited to total throughput of 15Gbps or less.
The Wi-Fi 7 router portion is only half of what the gateway can do, though. The other half is for your ISP, with support for internet plans of up to 10Gbps, or 10 times faster than the gigabit fiber and cable plans that ISPs commonly advertise today.
Charter Communications expects to roll out the new gateway starting next year to customers of its Spectrum internet service—ranked third in PCMag’s survey of the best ISPs—the company announced Wednesday. Across the pond, British
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