How an 802.11 Bill Becomes a Law

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This is by no means an exhaustive explanation, but a quick overview that was two slides of a Wi-Fi talk I gave at the Wisconsin State Telecommunications Association’s 2024 Fall Conference.

Matt Glosson's talk at 2024 WSTA Fall Conference

People over a certain age (and nostalgia nerds) will appreciate this video from 1976 that aired for a decade afterwards.

The Sausage Factory

Let’s use the development of 802.11be as our example. From this page, the 802.11be committee posted their updates. Here’s the table they show:

I found this interesting, to be sure, but what are all the acronyms? I’d never learned those in my technical Wi-Fi experience. Note the use of the indefinite article (“a”) versus the definite article (“the”) below. Here are the acronyms defined:

  • PAR: Project Authorization Request
    • Document that outlines the need for a new project or standard
  • TG: Task Group (IEEE 802.11be)
    • A subgroup within a working group focused on a specific task or project
  • WG: Working Group (IEEE 802.11)
    • A group of experts working on the development of a standard
  • SA: Standards Association (IEEE 802)
    • A body within IEEE that oversees the standards development process
  • EC: Executive Committee (IEEE)
    • The governing body that manages the activities of the Standards Association
  • RevCom: Review Committee
    • The committee that evaluates readiness for final approval
  • SASB: Standards Activities Support Branch
    • The division that provides support for standardization activities; acts like the “quality control board” and final authority that ensures an IEEE standard is legitimately developed, consensus-based, and ready to be officially published.

Now that we have an example and a basis for understanding, take a look at 802.11bn (which will likely be called Wi-Fi 8). From this page:

As I write this (April 21, 2025), it looks like they may be running a bit behind. Releasing 802.11bn only 4 years after 802.11be was a pretty aggressive timeline, so it will probably take a bit longer for the final standard. The Wi-Fi Alliance will probably run ahead a little bit anyway, as they did with certifying Wi-Fi 7 in January of 2024 when it was September before the final 802.11be was through all the committees.

I hope you enjoyed this small peek behind the curtain. Note that I am not involved in any of this, besides being a watchful eye (and having an IEEE login).