Chapter 9: Wi-Fi, Bluetooth & The Connected World

9.1 Wi-Fi: Your Home's Wireless Highway

Wi-Fi uses microwaves to create a local wireless network. The 2.4 GHz band has longer range but is crowded. The 5 GHz band is faster but shorter range.

Wi-Fi StandardYearFrequencyMax SpeedRange
Wi-Fi 420092.4 & 5 GHz600 Mbps~70 m
Wi-Fi 520145 GHz3.5 Gbps~35 m
Wi-Fi 620202.4 & 5 GHz9.6 Gbps~35 m
Wi-Fi 720242.4, 5, 6 GHz46 Gbps~30 m

9.2 Bluetooth: Short-Range Connections

Bluetooth uses 2.4 GHz at much lower power (~1 mW vs Wi-Fi's 100 mW), limiting range to ~10 m but making it very energy-efficient.

It uses frequency hopping — switching between 79 channels up to 1,600 times per second for interference resistance.

9.3 Cellular Networks: From 1G to 5G

GenYearTechnologySpeedInnovation
1G1980sAnalog voice2.4 kbpsFirst mobile phones
2G1990sDigital voice64 kbpsText messaging
3G2000sMobile data2 MbpsMobile internet
4G2010sBroadband100 MbpsVideo streaming
5G2020sMassive IoT10 GbpsAutonomous vehicles

5G uses three frequency ranges:

  • Low-band (< 1 GHz) — great range, moderate speed
  • Mid-band (1–6 GHz) — balanced range and speed
  • Millimeter wave (24–39 GHz) — extremely fast but short range

9.4 How Data Rides on Waves

Digital data (1s and 0s) is encoded into wave patterns through digital modulation:

  • ASK (Amplitude Shift Keying): 1 = strong signal, 0 = weak signal
  • FSK (Frequency Shift Keying): 1 = higher frequency, 0 = lower frequency
  • PSK (Phase Shift Keying): 1 = phase shifted, 0 = not shifted

Modern systems like 256-QAM (used in Wi-Fi 6) encode 8 bits per symbol using 256 combinations of amplitude and phase!

📊 Diagram: Three rows showing the same binary data (101) encoded using ASK, FSK, and PSK modulation schemes.