WiFi offload has ebbed and flowed as often as some pandemic viruses for at least a decade, amid oscillating enthusiasm and resistance from operators, as well as mixed response from users. Short-sighted resistance to WiFi from some quarters of the cellular industry has not helped the cause, almost strengthened recently by a false belief that 5G can sweep WiFi aside and satisfy most requirements for indoor connectivity. This almost seemed to trump the attraction of WiFi as a way of reducing strain on MNO mobile infrastructures by offloading traffic onto the fixed broadband networks. With the advent of WiFi 6E overcoming some of the challenges in performance, coverage, availability and low latency, there are signs of the game changing again…