Skip to main content

Wi-Fi Home Networks Enable HD Video Distribution

The digital home Local Area Network (LAN) will increasingly become instrumental in enabling HD video distribution within a residence, and in particular emerging over-the-top (OTT) video entertainment services.

Wired Ethernet is still the preferred method to interconnect devices on the network, such as broadband routers and digital media player set-top boxes. However, in larger homes there are times where using Ethernet cables isn't practical. Most consumers attempt to use Wi-Fi routers to provide wireless connectivity.

Using a legacy Wi-Fi router to stream HD video can be problematic, because high-definition video requires greater bandwidth. New high-speed gigabit routers are therefore becoming the preferred wireless home networking standard.

2009 was a premier year for the latest Wi-Fi standard, 802.11n. The current 802.11n devices showed significantly stronger growth than 802.11g, according to the latest market study by In-Stat. 802.11n grew 76 percent year-over-year -- compared with an annual decline of 14 percent for 802.11g.

"The wireless LAN (WLAN) market continued to grow in 2009, despite the decline of the worldwide overall market," says Vahid Dejwakh, In-Stat analyst.

In-Stat's market study found the following:

- Worldwide revenue was up 5.2 percent in 2009 compared with 2008.

- NETGEAR and D-Link took the lead in WLAN shipment market shares, at 23 percent and 18 percent respectively.

- 68.5 million WLAN units shipped in 2009.

- Small Office Home Office (SOHO) router revenues increased to $1.16 billion in 2009.

- North America accounted for 46 percent of all WLAN shipments in Q409.

Popular posts from this blog

Ultra-Wideband in Billions of New Devices

 Ultra-Wideband (UWB) is quietly becoming one of the most strategic short-range wireless technologies in the market, moving from niche deployments into the mainstream of smartphones, cars, and smart spaces. As the ecosystem matures and next-generation implementations arrive, UWB is shifting from nice-to-have to a foundational capability for secure access, sensing, and high-performance device-to-device connectivity. UWB Technology Market Development Unlike Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, NFC, or legacy IEEE 802.15.4 implementations, UWB combines three powerful attributes in a single radio: secure ranging, radar-like sensing, and low-latency, high-throughput short-range data. This allows networking and IT vendors to architect experiences that blend precise location, context awareness, and rich interaction in ways traditional connectivity stacks cannot easily match. According to the latest worldwide market study by ABI Research, UWB is expected to be one of the fastest-growing wireless connectivity...