Atul Bhatnagar: Excellent question, Scott. So first of all, 6 gigahertz United States is leading. I think every other country is observing Brazil is one of the first ones to come on the bandwagon. And in our prepared remarks, we just say, in Sao Paulo, we work with Brazilian authorities like NFL, and we showed that capability, I think you will see many progressive countries adopt 6 gigahertz. And there’s a reason for that, 5 gigahertz is a very well established frequency. But it is getting noisy. So when government gives you in about 1200 megahertz of, very clean spectrum, that’s a big deal. Like in two decades, there’s nothing like this has ever happened. So it’s a big deal. So our belief is that US will lead and many 5 gigahertz widths particularly are waiting for to expand and the cost advantage and the performance advantage from 5 gigahertz to 6 gigahertz continue.
Remember, when you go to the 60 gigahertz, 28 gigahertz there’s a technological change. And that’s why the gestation is needed. That’s why the experience is needed before you scale. But when it comes to six gigahertz, it’s a it’s an adjacency. They know how to do it. So I think the 6 gigahertz volume is starting the second half 2023 is still early, it will ratchet up in 2024 and 2025. And this has been our experience when we introduced Medusa in 2016, with our 5 gigahertz architecture and 3 gigahertz architecture, it ran for next four or five years. And that’s why I always emphasize that. So I think 2023 still for 6 in second half is a start, but it has a long legs after that. And we are feeling very excited, because our customers are getting excited, because they can see the price performance is of a different magnitude.
That’s why I always call it S-curve. It’s a new S-curve.
Scott Searle: Great. Thank you. I’ll get back in the queue.
Atul Bhatnagar: Thanks, Scott.
Operator: Thank you. One moment for our next question. And our next question comes from Erik Suppiger with JMP Securities. Your line is open.
Erik Suppiger: Yes. Thanks for taking the question and just following up a little bit more on some of the product segments. When — how much of your shipments on the enterprise side are Wi-Fi 6 or Wi-Fi 6E at this point. And then secondly, any comments in terms of timing around your fiber products, when you think those will start hitting the market and if they would be a meaningful contributor in 2023?
Atul Bhatnagar: Yes. Thanks. All right. First of all, Wi-Fi 6 transition in Cambium portfolio has happened very successfully. I would say majority of our shipments as of today are Wi-Fi 6 and 6E. . So that gives you a pretty good indication, majority. And this was a bet we made almost 18 months to two years back and has played very well. In terms of fiber timing, we are in beta. We will ship volume Q2 timeframe. And our customers are pulling us actually, because one of the things Cambium is known for is ease of deployment, single pane of glass for management. And they are saying, since the government dollars are going to be coming on that side as well, Cambium why don’t you provide us a nice solution. So our plan is where wireless stops fiber can take over, where fiber stops wireless can take over, single pane of glass to manage and focus on ease of deployment.
Erik Suppiger: Just real quick on the on the Wi-Fi 6, are you shipping much Wi-Fi 6E at this point?