Wednesday, January 18, 2006

Meru Ships its Radio Switch for High Density WLANs

Meru Networks began shipping its new Radio Switch Family, a gigabit-class, wireless LAN infrastructure switch built for high-density data and wireless VoIP applications in pervasive, enterprise WLANs.



Meru's Radio Switch family includes the four-radio RS-4000, the eight-radio RS-8000, the twelve-radio RS-12000 and a patent-pending, built-in omni-directional antenna. The system delivers up to 648 Mbps of WLAN bandwidth utilizing 802.11 standard radios, and is capable of scaling up to 1.2 Gbps of bandwidth across its coverage zone.



The Radio Switch layers up to 12 channels in a single coverage area -- a feature that is enabled by Meru's cellular-like architecture and Air Traffic Control technology. All three products are modular and can support radio additions and upgrades, including future 802.11n upgrades.
http://www.merunetworks.com











Wireless
LANs Need to Evolve toward Cellular Wireless Architecture
Recent
IEEE 802.11 task groups have worked to improve the speed of wireless
networking and increase the sophistication of the 802.11 base itself.
Unfortunately, 802.11 is still hamstrung by a fundamental problem. Given
the ever-increasing need to have real predictability in networks that will
soon top out at over 600Mbps and rival the capacity of wired networking,
it is clear that 802.11 needs to embrace a cellular wireless networking
architecture and associated technologies.