Why Wi-Fi 8 Multi-AP Coordination, Wi‑Fi 7 Rollouts And Open RAN Moves Signal A Faster, Smarter Network Future

07/11/2025 9 min
Why Wi-Fi 8 Multi-AP Coordination, Wi‑Fi 7 Rollouts And Open RAN Moves Signal A Faster, Smarter Network Future

Listen "Why Wi-Fi 8 Multi-AP Coordination, Wi‑Fi 7 Rollouts And Open RAN Moves Signal A Faster, Smarter Network Future"

Episode Synopsis

Send us a textHeadlines hit hard this week, and we stitched them into a practical roadmap you can use. We start with the fresh demos pointing toward Wi‑Fi 8’s multi‑AP future—coordinated radios, smarter spectral reuse, and AI‑assisted congestion control aimed squarely at dense campuses where roaming and contention burn time and budget. Some features may stay aspirational, but the signal is clear: access points are learning to cooperate, not compete.From there we ground the hype in what’s shipping. Rogers lit up Wi‑Fi 7 gear in Quebec with TP‑Link and Cisco hardware, Aruba pushed MLO improvements for cleaner onboarding across 2.4, 5, and 6 GHz, and forecasts suggest a meaningful slice of new APs will be Wi‑Fi 7 capable by year’s end. On the carrier side, an MVNO pact opens dual‑SIM handsets and smarter Wi‑Fi‑cellular handoffs for business users. The dream of a seamless hybrid fabric still trips on handoff quirks, but the ecosystem is finally lining up—hardware, firmware, and deployment playbooks.We also zoom out to the RAN. Deutsche Telekom’s partnership with Rakuten to orchestrate tens of thousands of sites signals that multi‑vendor Open RAN is ready for prime time. Faster provisioning, easier failover, and the freedom to mix Nokia, Ericsson, and Samsung radios—with a Cisco security overlay—give operators levers they’ve wanted for years. At the edge of the home and office, Matter certifications for Nest, Echo, and Eve plus multiprotocol hubs from TP‑Link and Linksys shorten onboarding and normalize WPA3 and segmentation, which is good news for MSPs, MDUs, and smart‑building teams.Security headlines keep us honest. A fresh warning on evil twin attacks meets urgent firmware from Cisco and Fortinet that adds anomaly detection and automated quarantine. We translate that into action: zero trust on guest networks, continuous AI‑driven threat modeling, and verified patch windows. After a week of DNS and cloud wobbles—yes, everyone still blames “the Wi‑Fi”—we stress tested cellular failover and reviewed playbooks that keep users working and ops sane.Listen for the quick takeaways, keep what helps, and share what you’re seeing in the field. If this briefing sharpened your planning, follow the show, drop a review, and pass it to a teammate who needs the TL;DR before their next strategy meeting. Support the showThanks 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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