Frequently asked questions – SMC Networks SMC2835W User Manual

Page 28

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13 | Frequently Asked Questions


What is a Wireless LAN?

A local area network that transmits over the air typically in an unlicensed frequency such as the

2.4GHz band. A wireless LAN does not require lining up devices for line of sight transmission like

IrDA. Wireless access points (base stations) are connected to an Ethernet hub or server and
transmit a radio frequency over an area of several hundred to a thousand feet which can

penetrate walls and other non-metal barriers. Roaming users can be handed off from one access

point to another like a cellular phone system. Laptops use wireless network cards that plug into

an existing PCMCIA slot or that are self contained on PC cards, while stand-alone desktops and

servers use plug-in cards (ISA, PCI, etc.).

What is AD-HOC?

An AD-HOC network is a peer to peer network where all the nodes are wireless clients. As an

example, two PC’s with wireless adapters can communicate with each other as long as they are
within range. A wireless extension point can extend the range of an AD-HOC network.

What is the 802.11 standard?

A family of IEEE standards for wireless LANs first introduced in 1997. 802.11 provides 1 or 2

Mbps transmission in the 2.4GHz band using either a frequency hopping modulation (FHSS)

technique or direct sequence spread spectrum (DSSS), which is also known as CDMA. The

802.11b standard defines an 11 Mbps data rate in the 2.4GHz band, 802.11g-draft standard

defines 54 Mbps in the 2.4GHz band, and the 802.11a standard defines 54 Mbps in the 5GHz
band.

What is Infrastructure?

In order for your wireless components to interact with traditional wired networks they need a

media bridge to translate for them. This is where INFRASTRUCTURE or Network mode comes

into play. An ACCESS POINT is attached to the network using CAT-5 Ethernet cable attaching to

a hub, switch or another PC. Wireless PC’s can then communicate to Wired Ethernet computers

through this access point. The total range of the network is limited to a radius around this Access

Point. To increase the range, extra Access Points may be wired into the network. These Access
Points talk to each other over the hard-wired Ethernet cables however, they cannot communicate

wirelessly to one another and they must be wired to the same network. Individual wireless PC’s

can move between Access Points on the same network seamlessly due to a feature called

ROAMING.

What is Tx Rate?

Tx-Rate or TRANSFER RATE is the current speed at which the network component is operating.

SMC-802.11b products can operate at speeds of 1Mb, 2Mb, 5.5Mb, & 11Mbps. A wireless card set

to AUTO will attempt to connect at whatever speed will give the best throughput on the network.

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