4 troubleshooting – Hawking Technology HWU54G User Manual

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4 Troubleshooting

This chapter provides solutions to problems usually encountered during the installation and operation

of the adapter.

1. Why can’t the USB adapter work or only work in 11b mode while connect to USB 2.0 port?

If this situation occurs, please upgrade the driver of your USB port. This problem may be the

compatibility issue with the old driver of the USB port.

2. What is the IEEE 802.11g standard?

802.11g is the new IEEE standard for high-speed wireless LAN communications that provides for

up to 54 Mbps data rate in the 2.4 GHz band. 802.11g is quickly becoming the next mainstream

wireless LAN technology for the home, office and public networks.

802.11g defines the use of the same OFDM modulation technique specified in IEEE 802.11a for

the 5 GHz frequency band and applies it in the same 2.4 GHz frequency band as IEEE 802.11b.

The 802.11g standard is backwards compatible with 802.11b.

The standard specifically calls for:

A. A new physical layer for the 802.11 Medium Access Control (MAC) i n the 2.4 GHz frequency

band, known as the extended rate PHY (ERP). The ERP adds OFDM as a mandatory new

coding scheme for 6, 12 and 24 Mbps (mandatory speeds), and 18, 36, 48 and 54 Mbps

(optional speeds). The ERP includes the modulation schemes found in 802.11b including

CCK for 11 and 5.5 Mbps and Barker code modulation for 2 and 1 Mbps.

B. A protection mechanism called RTS/CTS that governs how 802.11g devices and 802.11b

devices interoperate.

3. What is the IEEE 802.11b standard?

The IEEE 802.11b Wireless LAN standard subcommittee, which formulates the standard for the

industry. The objective is to enable wireless LAN hardware from different manufactures to

communicate.

4. What does IEEE 802.11 feature support?

The product supports the following IEEE 802.11 functions:

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CSMA/CA plus Acknowledge Protocol

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Multi-Channel Roaming

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Automatic Rate Selection

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RTS/CTS Feature

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Fragmentation

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Power Management

5. What is Ad-hoc?

An Ad-hoc integrated wireless LAN is a group of computers, each has a Wireless LAN adapter,

Connected as an independent wireless LAN. Ad hoc wireless LAN is applicable at a

departmental scale for a branch or SOHO operation.

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