Many common assumptions about the development of the Wi-Fi industry in 2007
have been exposed as "myths", an analyst firm has claimed.
ABI Research believes it is incorrect to suggest that independent, or 'fat',
access points are dead.
"These products are far from dead, and in fact still represented a third of
all access points shipped in 2007," said ABI vice president and research
director Stan Schatt.
Schatt believes that more intelligent, more feature-rich independent access
points designed specifically for the SMB market represent a threat to market
leader Cisco.
This is because some of these products cross into the territory Cisco
reserves for its own branded products and not for Linksys products.
A second Wi-Fi industry 'myth' is that enterprises are driving the equipment
market.
Schatt explained that anyone attending this year's Interop trade show in Las
Vegas would have assumed that enterprises were the chief recipient of Wi-Fi
equipment. But the analyst disagrees.
"While news stories focus on large deployments of Wi-Fi equipment at
companies such as General Electric and Coca-Cola, some 95 per cent of access
point shipments in 2007 were to consumers and small businesses," he said.
Enterprise-grade Wi-Fi equipment offers far more features, including greater
security, and commands a far higher price.
But Schatt pointed to the fact that revenue from enterprise purchases of
Wi-Fi access points represented 32 per cent of all access point revenue in 2007.
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