- Cómo justificar nuevas contrataciones en el equipo de TI en la era de la IA generativa
- Finally, wireless earbuds that sound great, feel comfortable, and won't break the bank
- Is Your B2B Marketing Missing Out? Maximize Social with Cisco Marketing Velocity
- The Growing Threat of Ransomware-as-a-Service (RaaS) on Healthcare Infrastructure
- Pantheon of college football gets a Wi-Fi upgrade
Wi-Fi 6E: When it’s coming and what it’s good for

This spring the FCC opened up a new swath of unlicensed wireless spectrum in the 6GHz band that’s intended for use with Wi-Fi and can provide lower latency and faster data rates. The new spectrum also has a shorter range and supports more channels than bands that were already dedicated to Wi-Fi, making it suitable for deployment in high-density areas like stadiums.
To further understand what Wi-Fi 6E is and how it differs from Wi-Fi 6, I recently talked with Perry Correll, director of product management for networking solutions vendor Extreme Networks.
Kerravala: Wi-Fi 6 seems to be getting a lot of hype but not Wi-Fi 6E. Why?
Correll: There’s so much confusion around all the 666 numbers, it’ll scare you to death. You’ve got Wi-Fi 6, Wi-Fi 6E – and Wi-Fi 6 still has additional enhancements coming after that, with multi-user multiple input, multiple output (multi-user MIMO) functionalities. Then there’s the 6GHz spectrum, but that’s not where Wi-Fi 6 gets its name from: It’s the sixth generation of Wi-Fi. On top of all that, we are just getting a handle 5G and there already talking about 6G – seriously, look it up – it’s going to get even more confusing.
Kerravala: Why do we need Wi-Fi 6E versus regular Wi-Fi 6?