Will 802.11b Work with 802.11g?

Even before the standard for 54Mbps 802.11g is finalized, vendors aware of
the growing interest in 11g have been announcing and shipping products based
on the technology, hoping to lay claim to part of a lucrative Wi-Fi market.
But in the rush to be first to reach customers, is early 802.11g gear leaving
the all important interoperability with 802.11b devices in the dust?

As microchip executives defend their decision to market products based on the
unratified 802.11g specification, technicians gathered at the University of
New Hampshire to conclude the latest round of closed-door tests of 802.11g products
heading for a store near you.

Rush to Market?

"The problem with some of the early (11g) chips, is there was a rush to
market to have something labeled G-ish," says Rich Redelfs, CEO of Atheros.
He made the comment at a press conference announcing that four
major laptop makers
will use Atheros’ 11a/b and 11a/b/g chips.

The new debate over 11g calls into question one of prime attractions of the
technology: the 54Mbps wireless networking standard’s backward compatibility
with the slower 11Mbps, but more widely-available, 802.11b. Both use the crowded
2.4GHz radio frequency band.

The 802.11g standard uses orthogonal frequency-division (OFDM) to attain its
high data speed. To protect 802.11b users, 802.11g is required to also send
a protection signal based on the longer complementary code keying (CCK.) In
interviews earlier this week, Sheung Li, an Atheros product line manager claims
some vendors are bypassing the protection signal. Omitting the protection signal
ensures high data speeds for 11g users, at the cost of locking out 802.11b users.

Without the protection, an 802.11b user would be blocked by an invisible flow
of 802.11g data and assume the wireless network had crashed.

"The IEEE decided to prioritize G over B in a mixed environment,"
says Redelfs. "The decision was that if you got G, you want the speed,
so they come first," he says. "B gets low priority to the air,"
according to the Atheros CEO.

Chipmakers Disagree

"We don’t share this perspective," says Jim Zyren, director of strategic
marketing at Intersil . "Our testing has not shown
this effect," says Zyren. Intersil’s 802.11g chip, the PRISM GT is used
by D-Link and Netgear, among others, says Zyren.

Zyren says the latest draft version of 11g gives two times as much access than
11b, but "every 11g device must be able to communicate with 11b."
Zyren says Intersil will support the protection signal mechanism. The chipmaker
representative says the concerns are the result of "technical misinterpretation"
or misconfigured access points.

Chipmaker Broadcom , which powers many 11g products
available now including those from Buffalo
Technology
, calls stories of 11g interoperability problems "scuttlebutt"
and "rumors." Chips produced by Broadcom will use protection mechanisms
ensuring 802.11b compatibility, although the protection signal portion is "now
only partially implemented," says Mike Hurlston, Broadcom’s director of
business development.

Hurlston says when the final 802.11g standard is approved, the optional protection
mechanism will be mandatory and "if 11b is present, protection must be
used."

He does admit there is a problem with an incompatibility between 11g and so-called
"legacy" 802.11b cards. The problem is older 802.11b cards will not
be able to join 11g networks due to an incompatible number of data rates. While
11g devices recognize 12 different rates of speed, 11b sees only eight.

"If 802.11b devices get more than eight rates, they don’t know what to
do," says Hurlston. The problem was answered by the IEEE deciding to divide
the 12 rates into a block of eight and another segment of four rates. Hurston
said older 802.11b devices could be updated by a software fix.

Redelf says there are just too many versions of 802.11g floating around and
with the different versions come confusion and questions of interoperability
not just between 802.11g and 11b, but also between various versions of 11g.

"I don’t want to taint the market against 11g," says Redelf, but
"people have just jumped the gun." Redelfs denied Atheros is a lone
voice, citing previous reports of 11g’s failings.

Equipment Vendors Speak

What do equipment vendors say about this war of words? Morikazu Sano, Buffalo
Technology’s vice president of networking, has no concerns about Broadcom’s
chip.

"We worked with our chipset manufacturer, and together worked through
any 802.11b interoperability or compatibility issues related to Buffalo’s pre-standard
802.11g products."

Joseph Moran, a contributing editor and product tester for 802.11 Planet,
who has reviewed Buffalo’s AirStation
G54 Broadband Router Access Point
, says "you get the sense that they’re
releasing the firmware du jour on a fairly regular basis, to include
various interoperability and performance tweaks in anticipation of the final
802.11g standard."

Moran says he was able to get a D-Link 802.11b card to operate with Buffalo’s
access point, using the product’s dual b/g mode. The product has a G only mode
that will not work with B cards.

Hewlett Packard says it will wait until the 802.11g
standard is finalized later this year before releasing an 11g version of its
ProCurve gear.

"HP generally likes to wait until standards are together," says an
HP spokesperson.

So, are these concerns signs of real problems for 802.11g, or is it all smoke?

Is There A Fire?

"It’s mostly smoke," believes John Chang, senior analyst for the
Allied Business Intelligence research firm.
Chang says while 11g is not ratified, "the vendors have worked closely
with the IEEE to make sure that there were no surprises with the full 11g standards."

"Certainly the G spec does have a void in spelling out the way that G
and B nodes interact," says Allen Nogee, analyst with the In-Stat/MDR
research firm. Nogee says makers of 11g-based gear are working on the gaps and
100 percent compatibility won’t be likely until the Wi-Fi Alliance begins testing
pre-standard gadgets.

Nogee says the same concerns about interoperability surrounded 802.11b at first.
When manufacturers added 128-bit Wired Equivalent Protection (WEP) encryption, "no two cards from different manufacturers could operate
together. Did the world crash down because of the problems? Nope."

The analyst says 802.11g will be the same. "If you are not willing to
deal with the problems, I don’t recommend that you buy a card six months before
the standard is even approved."

Testing 11g

If industry insiders aren’t certain if current 11g products suffer from a lack
of compatibility, how is the buying public to make intelligent purchasing decisions?
Testing is one answer.

Chipmakers and equipment vendors gathered this week at the University
of New Hampshire’s Interoperability Laboratory
to conduct secret tests of
802.11g and 802.11b compatibility. Participants were required to sign a strict
gag order, or non-disclosure agreement, by the Wi-Fi
Alliance
industry group. The gag order keeps the results of the tests out
of the public eye for a year, after the Alliance can put its own stamp of approval
on 802.11g products sometime in May or June, after the specification is ratified
by the IEEE.

Dennis Eaton, chairman of the Wi-Fi Alliance, says the secrecy is needed to
attract companies to the private tests. Eaton says he "expects some interoperability
issues" to arise during tests of the products and if the results were published,
"some vendors might choose not to attend."

The Univ. of New Hampshire 11g interoperability test was the fourth in a series
of events the Alliance is using to create a test bed of data it can use during
the later certification process. The Alliance has already certified 11b products
and recently began certifying
11a devices
.

Does 11g have a serious interoperability problem? Equipment manufacturers say
no, yet secretly gather to test for such incompatibility. Analysts provide a
mixed message of assurance and warning. As more 11g products make their way
to the market, customers at home and in offices will be the last to learn the
real answer.

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