If 60 GHz WiFi (WiGig) ever takes off, Qualcomm will find itself in one hell of a lead. And Qualcomm talked up this possibility at a webinar held this week by WiFi supremo, Mark Grodzinsky, senior director of product management at Qualcomm Technologies. There has been little news since Qualcomm added a bunch of features in January this year, but the chip giant’s acquisition of WiGig start-up Wilocity remains highly strategic. Wilocity came out of what some described as a “science experiment”, but now has its chips in commercial products like the Netgear Nighthawk. Grodzinsky also pointed to initiatives such as one from operator du, in Duba, which has installed 60 GHz-capable WiFi in 300 hotspots as a trial. He…