Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. Trash
  4. News

Wi-Fi 7 is coming to CES 2022 with promises of even faster speeds

Add as a preferred source on Google

MediaTek has announced that it’s already planning the unveiling of Wi-Fi 7, and it’s coming soon.

Wi-Fi 6 — also known as 802.11ax — routers are only starting to trickle into homes today, and the even newer Wi-Fi 6E access points are barely hitting the market. Still, MediaTek is starting to prepare for the launch of Wi-Fi 7.

Eero 6 Wi-Fi Mesh Router on a table.
John Velasco / Digital Trends

The company announced that it will begin demoing Wi-Fi 7 at the Consumer Electronics Show in early January. The exciting technology standard promises even faster speeds than Wi-Fi 6 and Wi-Fi 5.

Wi-Fi 7 will also be known as 802.11be, and MediaTek stated that the technology is expected to bring 2.4x the speeds and lower latency than its predecessor, according to company documents that were published on PCMag.

When Wi-Fi 6 launched, it was panned as the biggest upgrade to Wi-Fi in a decade. The technology standard, which also underpins the newer Wi-Fi 6E, promised faster speeds, reduced congestion, offered lower latency, and had better security. The standard supported speeds close to 10Gbps speeds, provided that your broadband connection can handle that.

Netgear, for example, claimed that its Wi-Fi 6-powered Orbi mesh networking unit delivers five times faster speeds than the previous 802.11ac Wi-Fi 5 standard. Using Netgear’s calculations, a Wi-Fi 7 router should be capable of 12 times the speed of Wi-Fi 5 by extension.

Though the faster speeds, increased bandwidth, and lower latency may be appealing to homes that stream a lot of 4K video or play action-packed PC or console games, the protocol could come at a hefty cost. Mesh networks that support Wi-Fi 6 are already pricey, and Wi-Fi 6E modems command an even higher premium. Netgear’s Wi-Fi 6E whole-home Orbi mesh network costs $1,500, for reference.

In contrast, the Wi-Fi 5-equipped routers like the Vilo mesh system start at $20 for a single router and $60 for a whole-home network. Wi-Fi 7 routers, mesh networks, and access points could be even more costly to adopt, and most homes in the U.S. will likely not be able to take full advantage of the speeds that the protocol is capable of delivering.

According to Ookla, the company behind the popular Speediest.net app that measures the speed of your Internet connection, the average American home gets speeds slightly faster than 200Mbps on average for the year, with the sample ending in October 2021. Wi-Fi 7, on the other hand, can reach theoretical speeds up to 30Gbps.

Though an early preview of the next generation of Wi-Fi may happen in early 2022, the technology could still take years to reach home routers, PCs, tablets, smartphones, and other connected devices. According to IEEE, the governing body for Wi-Fi standards, the 802.11be amendment will be published in 2024 with commercial deployment occurring shortly after.

Chuong Nguyen
Silicon Valley-based technology reporter and Giants baseball fan who splits his time between Northern California and Southern…
Macbook Neo stress test shows Apple could’ve made it run cooler with a simple fix
This simple mod makes the MacBook Neo faster.
Apple MacBook Neo with users hands on it

Apple's MacBook Neo arrived as a shock to the industry. It is the new cheap MacBook that is designed to be silent, efficient, and affordable. But a new stress test suggests that it could have been noticeably better with a very simple change.

As per a recent test, the addition of a basic copper plate to the cooling setup can improve both thermals and performance by a meaningful margin. And the frustrating part? It isn't some complex engineering overhaul and is relatively straightforward.

Read more
The Mac Pro is dead at Apple, and I’ll miss the cheese-grater powerhouse
RIP Mac Pro. The Mac Studio is taking the throne, and we're okay with that.
Electronics, Computer, Pc

Apple has officially discontinued the Mac Pro. It’s been removed from Apple’s website, and Apple has confirmed to 9to5Mac that there are no plans to release a future version. The buy page now redirects to Apple’s Mac homepage, where the Mac Pro no longer exists.

Why did Apple kill the Mac Pro?

Read more
March Madness, Revisited: The AI Model Did Well. But Mad Things Still Happen
Stills from NCAA games.

(NOTE: This article is part of an ongoing series documenting an experiment with using AI to fill the NCAA brackets and see how it fares against years of human experience. The original article is as follows.)

A week ago, I wrote about entering an NCAA tournament pool with a more disciplined process than I usually use.

Read more