Comments Locked

15 Comments

Back to Article

  • fazalmajid - Thursday, August 6, 2020 - link

    Another nail in the coffin of 30GHz mmWave 5G, which literally can't punch its way out of a paper bag?
  • deil - Thursday, August 6, 2020 - link

    placing might be a challange but once you are in, nothing will stop you from getting full bandwith.
    on 2.4g long range is a curse in flats. my phone can detect ~30 wifi networks on 2.4g and like 13 on 5g. mm 'ish wave would be good, IF it works though wood, but not concrete.
  • hanselltc - Friday, August 7, 2020 - link

    I believe if it "literally can't punch its way out of a paper bag" it won't work through wood kek
  • dotjaz - Saturday, August 8, 2020 - link

    Why do you think laws of physics is an "IF"? Both 2.4GHz/5.8GHz signals are capable of penetrating walls, mmWave literally can't.
  • Santoval - Thursday, August 6, 2020 - link

    It never could. You can't beat the laws of physics. What you *can* do is install femto/nano/microcells everywhere in a city (and only in a city), and by everywhere I mean *everywhere*, but which company is going to do that? One idea is they might give the cells, either static or mobile, to the 5G users. One femto/picocell for each 5G subscriber. That could work. Barely. If they manage to sell the cells and their cost is low enough.

    By contrast, sub-6GHz 5G is just souped up LTE 4G. A few more CAT iterations paired with the required large enough QAM modulations and its speed would have been reached by LTE - or would have come very close. sub-6GHz is basically LTE 4G+ (if that doesn't already exist) but it's the actual usable "5G". mmWave 5G, the actual, super fast but super weak 5G, was designed for marketing purposes to push sub-6GHz along with it and the telcos hoped most people would confuse the two or think they are comparable. Noobs and tech illiterates certainly do.
  • close - Thursday, August 6, 2020 - link

    That's great if I'm at home and the *cell is connected to a cable and provides the full bandwidth of that connection to my phone and with LoS to it. But then again in that situation I'm better off using WiFi. I want fast mobile connection when I am on the move. And on the move you will rarely have that needed LoS unless someone installs cells *everywhere*. Manhole covers, drainpipes, utility poles, etc.

    I agree with the rest, much of what 5G is today was designed to look good on a marketing flyer. This counteracts the slowdown in phone improvement as people start throwing money on new phones and better data plans.
  • Spunjji - Thursday, August 6, 2020 - link

    Ugh, that statement from Joe Chen.
    "groundbreaking 5G modem technology" - not really, it's been done several times already..?

    "we will...bring consumers the best 5G experiences"
    Doesn't that require a centrifuge?
  • yeeeeman - Thursday, August 6, 2020 - link

    Happy for them since I am a bit tired of Qualcomm getting the entire cake.
  • JayNor - Thursday, August 6, 2020 - link

    Is Huawei's 5G modem not functional?
  • JayNor - Thursday, August 6, 2020 - link

    I didn't see mention of multi-mode LTE 4g/5G. Seems like with 5G's wall penetration problems 5G alone would be a limited solution ... maybe efficient for industrial applications, but not so good as a laptop always connected solution.

    btw, I believe Intel only gave up rights to the smartphone 5G modem use case. Their statements indicate they reserved rights for other cases, which I guess could include always connected laptops and the mobile 5G vehicle to vehicle applications. Hard to see how they do that without a design group, so maybe MediaTek will work with them on other projects. Intel also needs a Foveros 3D compatible 5G chiplet.
  • AdityaK - Friday, August 7, 2020 - link

    Steady performance with great efficiency and power now in laptops! MediaTek coming a long way with their recent developments.
  • NitinYadav251096 - Saturday, August 8, 2020 - link

    That's a great news and Mediatek has made 5G possible even in the laptops. This new combo would work really well.
  • DontWorry1221 - Friday, August 21, 2020 - link

    You can't beat the laws of physics. What you *can* do is install femto/nano/microcells everywhere in a city (and only in a city), and by everywhere I mean *everywhere*, but which company is going to do that? One idea is they might give the cells, either static or mobile, to the 5G users. One femto/picocell for each 5G subscriber. That could work. Barely. If they manage to sell the cells and their cost is low enough. By contrast, sub-6GHz 5G is just souped up LTE 4G. A few more CAT iterations paired with the required large enough QAM modulations and its speed would have been reached by LTE - or would have come very close. sub-6GHz is basically LTE 4G+ (if that doesn't already exist) but it's the actual usable "5G". mmWave 5G, the actual, super fast but super weak 5G, was designed for marketing purposes to push sub-6GHz along with it and the telcos hoped most people would confuse the two or think they are comparable. Noobs and tech illiterates certainly do.

    ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Editor: https://manganelo.link/manga/read-bj-alex/
  • DontWorry1221 - Wednesday, January 13, 2021 - link

    You can't beat the laws of physics. What you *can* do is install femto/nano/microcells everywhere in a city (and only in a city), and by everywhere I mean *everywhere*, but which company is going to do that? One idea is they might give the cells, either static or mobile, to the 5G users. One femto/picocell for each 5G subscriber. That could work. Barely. If they manage to sell the cells and their cost is low enough.

    ----------------------------------------------------------------------
    https://mangapan.com/manga/my-housemate/
    https://1stkissmanga.online/manga/isekai-kenkokuki...
    https://lhscan.me/manga/tsugumomo/
  • DontWorry1221 - Tuesday, March 2, 2021 - link

    That's great if I'm at home and the *cell is connected to a cable and provides the full bandwidth of that connection to my phone and with LoS to it. But then again in that situation I'm better off using WiFi. I want fast mobile connection when I am on the move. And on the move you will rarely have that needed LoS unless someone installs cells *everywhere*. Manhole covers, drainpipes, utility poles, etc.

    I agree with the rest, much of what 5G is today was designed to look good on a marketing flyer. This counteracts the slowdown in phone improvement as people start throwing money on new phones and better data plans.

    --------------------------------------------------------------------------
    https://freestuffsng.com/free-stuffs/

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now