Intel announced its first 802.11g wireless chip for notebooks bearing the Centrino banner, the company says in a release on Thursday. The Intel Pro/Wireless 2200BG chip allows users to connect to either 802.11b or 802.11g wireless networks. Intel is shipping the chip to its notebook customers with systems expected worldwide during the first quarter, says Dan Francisco, an Intel spokesperson. The Centrino package of the Pentium M processor, a mobile chip set, and the Intel Pro/Wireless 2100 chip was introduced in March of last year with 802.11b capability.
Better Bandwidth
The 802.11b standard is the most widely used for wireless LAN connections, but the 802.11g and 802.11a standards offer greater bandwidth of around 20 to 25 megabits per second in real-world conditions. The 802.11b standard offers around 4 mbps to 5 mbps of bandwidth in real-world conditions. Intel had hoped to have the greater bandwidth options available at the Centrino launch, but a series of delays pushed the launch of the combination 802.11a/b chip into October. A dual-band chip with support for all three major WLAN networks is expected to start shipping to customers in the middle of this year, Francisco says.
News source: PCWorld