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Waves with Wireless Nerd

Waves with Wireless Nerd

Von: Drew Lentz the Wirelessnerd
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Join me for a weekly look into what's making waves in tech and the wireless industry! What's new? What's now? What's next?

© 2026 Waves with Wireless Nerd
  • Smarter Wireless: Design Standards, Tool Updates, Trends And Real-World Use
    Feb 5 2026

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    Miss the days when Wi‑Fi talk meant real problems, real tools, and real wins? Same here. I’m back on camera to unpack what actually moved the needle and what’s about to—from the push to standardize Wi‑Fi design to the quiet march toward Wi‑Fi 8 and the gear being pitched as “ready” for it. I share how a voice clone and an AI-powered workflow with Kero and Claude helped me build The Wireless Monitor, a curated briefing that filters the firehose into actionable trends for engineers and leaders.

    We dig into WLPC’s session themes and why the proposed Wi‑Fi design standard needs rigorous, vendor-neutral guardrails to be trusted. Expect a candid look at silicon announcements, multi‑gig switching, and whether Wi‑Fi 8’s promised gains translate into real quality of experience. On the practical side, I highlight tools worth caring about: Wi‑Fi Check for clean device-to-AP-to-internet visibility in one tap, and Hamina’s Clip, a compact survey companion that connects over BLE and plays nicely with VPNs. These tools reflect a larger shift from “does it connect” to “does it deliver outcomes we can prove.”

    Beyond specs, we talk retail, hospitality, and the reality of Wi‑Fi as context: personalization at the menu board, telemetry that informs staffing and layouts, and the ethical line as research turns RF into sensing and “see-through-walls” headlines. Resiliency is rising too—cable operators bundling 5G failover and battery backup, LEO constellations promising backup paths, and policy tremors around WISPs and MDU bulk contracts. The throughline is simple: connectivity is now an engine for decisions, not just a pipe. If you care about standards you can trust, tools you’ll actually carry, and networks that stay up when it counts, hit play and join the conversation.

    Enjoyed this one? Follow, share with a teammate, and drop a review with your take on design standards and whether I should keep video, go audio-only, or publish the AI-generated version next.

    Support the show

    Thanks to our sponsors: Helium & meter Networks!
    🤑Looking for ways to monetize your network? Check out helium.com!
    💡Change everything you thought you knew about networking at meter.com

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    39 Min.
  • Why Wi‑Fi 7’s Surge Matters And How Wi‑Fi 8 Will Change Network Design - Plus the WiFiNow Awards and BEAD Funds!
    Dec 17 2025

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    The wireless world just flipped from speed bragging rights to real‑world reliability, and we’re here for it. We break down how Wi‑Fi 7 went mainstream faster than anyone expected, why Cisco’s below‑6E pricing and AI‑ops licensing strategy vaulted them to the top, and what that means if you’re debating an upgrade from Wi‑Fi 6 or 6E. The decision no longer ends at the radio—it’s about committing to a cloud and AI stack that will steer roaming, airtime, and assurance for years.

    Then we look ahead: Wi‑Fi 8 isn’t promising just bigger peaks, it’s setting the stage for multi‑AP coordination and agentic AI on the AP to lower real latency in messy RF. Think clusters over boxes and an RF brain that orchestrates who talks, when, and where. Qualcomm’s timeline and industry whispers around MWC Barcelona point to silicon arriving sooner than standards alone suggest, and early targets hint at around 25 percent gains in throughput and 95th percentile latency when the cooperative features are turned on.

    Outside the lab, the buildout story turns concrete. BEAD awards are now announced across all states, with fiber shouldering most deployments and Starlink providing a resilient layer where fiber won’t reach. That changes planning for schools, libraries, and campuses—align your LAN upgrades with incoming backhaul so you don’t overbuild. We also spotlight Helium’s joint venture with Mambo Wi‑Fi in Brazil, where a tokenized incentive model meets a conventional ISP to crowd‑host the last mile with SLAs backed by analytics. Add a stadium refresh at Empower Field that shows the payoff of 6 GHz for operations and fans, a candid look at convention center Wi‑Fi contract tiers, and MikroTik’s consumer‑friendly Wi‑Fi 7 router with Matter and Thread.

    IoT rounds out the shift from hype to critical infrastructure. Enterprises are consolidating on fewer platforms, budgeting for lifecycle security and observability, and treating sensors, cameras, and handhelds as production endpoints. That pressure dovetails with Wi‑Fi 7’s latency improvements and Wi‑Fi 8’s reliability playbook, making AI‑driven control and better telemetry table stakes. If you’re planning 2025, this is the moment to pick your control plane, design for coordinated clusters, and map your upgrades to where the fiber—and the budgets—are actually landing.

    Enjoying the show? Follow, share with a teammate, and leave a quick review to help more wireless pros find us. Got a story or field result we should feature? Tag us and tell us what you’re building next.

    Support the show

    Thanks to our sponsors: Helium & meter Networks!
    🤑Looking for ways to monetize your network? Check out helium.com!
    💡Change everything you thought you knew about networking at meter.com

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    19 Min.
  • From Fries To Fiber, Dual-Mode APs, Multi-Cloud to WiFi 8, 5G & more!
    Dec 12 2025

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    A week in Vegas turned into a crash course in where networking is headed—starting with a potato-smashing contest at Five Guys and ending with Eero tunnels landing cleanly in AWS. That gut-level, customer-first perspective sets the tone as we dig into real demos, new tools, and the shifting policies that shape what gets built next.

    We unpack how a simple site-to-site VPN and a transit gateway can turn small sites into first-class cloud citizens, then jump into Kiro, an AI-driven IDE that makes rapid prototyping feel effortless. A standout moment: teens using microphones and servos to drive a robotic hand that signs in real time, a reminder that accessible AI tooling can move ideas from spark to shipping. We also test the cultural headwinds—why younger folks view AI as wasteful—and explore practical paths toward efficiency, cleaner power, and responsible scaling without losing the productivity gains many of us rely on every day.

    On the enterprise front, HPE’s dual‑mode Wi‑Fi 7 access points promise real buyer protection by letting teams pivot between Aruba Central and Juniper Mist without forklift swaps. Meanwhile, BEAD funding loosens letter‑of‑credit rules but collides with a new White House order tying eligibility to state AI policy, adding uncertainty for WISPs, co‑ops, and integrators trying to plan builds. From the show floor, the subtle star was networking: AWS Interconnect’s multi‑cloud links and unified DNS hint at a future where campus Wi‑Fi feeds smart paths into whichever cloud edge hosts your app. Add Ubiquiti’s UniFi 5G Max lineup and 5G becomes a serious primary or failover WAN that still lives inside familiar management. We close by charting Wi‑Fi 8’s coordinated multi‑AP vision—CTDMA, better roaming, and predictable latency—and where it will feel real first.

    If this mix of hands-on stories, practical architectures, and straight talk on policy helped, follow the show, share it with a teammate, and leave a quick review. Your take: is dual‑mode Wi‑Fi 7 meaningful buyer protection or just marketing hedge?

    Support the show

    Thanks to our sponsors: Helium & meter Networks!
    🤑Looking for ways to monetize your network? Check out helium.com!
    💡Change everything you thought you knew about networking at meter.com

    Mehr anzeigen Weniger anzeigen
    27 Min.
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