Wi-Fi

Meanwhile, inside the home, how is the Wi-Fi?

By Ian Scales

Jan 29, 2019

Grabbing some free WiFi from a hotel room, via Flickr © tiseb (CC BY 2.0)

  • The problems of indoor coverage for WiFi is still a live issue
  • It's being fixed and there are different approaches
  • Here’s the telco-friendly Wireless Broadband Alliance view

Once you get the broadband radio signal inside the home, (see - The critical puzzle-piece for fixed 5G: self-install technology) you need some technology to distribute the data reliably around the home or office. Today the Wireless Broadband Alliance (WBA) released the a new whitepaper, In-Home Wi-Fi Industry Guidelines, which identifies the gaps within in-home Wi-Fi standards and proposes a set of common guidelines for the operator community.

The WBA points out that the home is expected to have 1.3 billion connected devices by 2022, which will dramatically increase demands on in-home Wi-Fi networks. If operators are to enable the Smart Home of the future, it is critical that they overcome the home coverage problem and provide optimal service uniformly around the home.

While current in-home Wi-Fi standards have made progress on these issues, the WBA has uncovered gaps that must be addressed if operators are to fully prepare for the next evolution of in-home Wi-Fi networks. The white paper highlights the the need for intelligent network optimisation to tackle the challenges contributing to inconsistent in-home experience: a lack of both uniform coverage and visibility into the in-home Wi-Fi experience.

The latest report, In-Home Wi-Fi Industry Guidelines 2019, is available here.  

Wireless Broadband Alliance Addresses Challenges for In-Home Wi-Fi


WBA calls for unified approach to standards and trials to drive performance and service improvements


London 29 January 2019 - The Wireless Broadband Alliance, a leading organization in support of the adoption of next generation Wi-Fi services across the Wi-Fi ecosystem, announced today the availability of a new white paper, In-Home Wi-Fi Industry Guidelines 2019, which identifies the gaps in current in-home Wi-Fi standards and highlights the need for intelligent network optimization. Led by CableLabs, Intel, Liberty Global and Fon, together with other members, the WBA aims to tackle the challenges that have contributed to inconsistent performance in the home, including a lack of uniform coverage and visibility into the in-home Wi-Fi experience. The paper provides an industry go-to reference when preparing for Smart Home deployments.
The home is expected to have 1.3 billion connected devices by 2022, according to IDC. Many operators have already moved towards a multiple Wi-Fi Access Point (Multi-AP) strategy to tackle the home coverage problem, address congestion, and provide optimal service uniformly around the house. While existing standards have made progress on these issues, this white paper provides a uniform approach to fully prepare for the next evolution of in-home Wi-Fi networks and adjacent services.
“The in-home Wi-Fi experience has always been dictated by conditions that are specific to each home, which creates a chaotic puzzle for operators,” said Tiago Rodrigues, General Manager of the WBA. “To compound this, the advent of the Smart Home and the explosion of streaming and IoT services is dramatically increasing demands on in-home Wi-Fi networks. Current standards have come a long way to tackle the issues of interference, congestion, coverage and performance. But with increasingly variable network conditions on the horizon, innovation in smart Wi-Fi network optimization will be crucial to guarantee quality of service for customers.”
“Challenges exist in the end-to-end delivery and management of Wi-Fi service in the home even with faster internet service and the latest Wi-Fi standards,” said John Bahr, Principal Architect at CableLabs. “CableLabs has been working with WBA members on this paper which provides an assessment of the current ecosystem to identify service requirements of operators, along with approaches to address key technical and deployment challenges.”
The WBA is calling for vendors to join forces with the operator community to comply with its proposed common guidelines. Included within these are recommendations to address the in-home challenges of coordination of radio resource management, device onboarding and management, as well as deployment and end-to-end security. Based on this consensus from its members, the WBA also suggests the development of a set of performance test cases for industry-wide use.
“Innovations in Wi-Fi are essential to give consumers exactly what they need for richer, immersive experiences – fast, responsive connectivity and an intelligently managed network,” said Doron Tal, General Manager of Intel’s Wireless Infrastructure Group. “Industry collaboration will help accelerate this innovation. The new in-home Wi-Fi report from the WBA – led by Intel and other members – is a great example of how the industry is partnering on the next evolution of home Wi-Fi networks.”
The WBA has established future lines of work that will evolve the in-home Wi-Fi network, and become critical to realizing the vision of the Smart Home. Its 2025 Smart Home program proposes an aggregate approach which includes performance testing use cases for in-home networks to guarantee equipment deployed in the home can offer the best quality experience; real operating environment trials of Multi-AP / mesh networks based on standard test plan; IoT support to guarantee that quality of service is unaffected by scaling up in in-home networks; and the ability of the in-home network to enable Wi-Fi and 5G services to be interoperable within the home environment.
The latest report, In-Home Wi-Fi Industry Guidelines 2019, is available to download here 

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