NEWS
ON WI-FI SYSTEM
WiFi is the wireless way to handle networking. It is also known
as 802.11 networking and wireless networking. The big advantage
of WiFi is its simplicity. You can connect computers anywhere in
your home or office without the need for wires. The computers connect
to the network using radio signals, and computers can be up to 100
feet or so apart.
The Walkie-Talkie Network
If you want to understand wireless networking at its simplest level,
think about a pair of $5 walkie-talkies that you might purchase
at any supermarket. These are small radios that can transmit and
receive radio signals. When you talk into a Walkie-Talkie, your
voice is picked up by a microphone, encoded onto a radio frequency,
and transmitted with the antenna. Another walkie-talkie can receive
the transmission with its antenna, decode your voice from the radio
signal and drive a speaker. Simple walkie-talkies like this transmit
at a signal strength of about 0.25 watts, and they can transmit
about 500 to 1,000 feet.
Let's imagine that you want to connect two computers together in
a network using walkie-talkie technology:
· You would equip each computer with a walkie-talkie.
· You would give each computer a way to set whether it wants
to transmit or receive.
· You would give the computer a way to turn its binary 1s
and 0s into two different beeps that the walkie-talkie could transmit
and receive and convert back and forth between beeps and 1s/0s.
This would actually work. The only problem would be that the data
rate would be very slow. A $5 walkie-talkie is designed to handle
the human voice (and it's a pretty scratchy rendition at that),
so you would not be able to send very much data this way. Maybe
1,000 bits per second. The radios used in WiFi are not so different
from the radios used in $5 walkie-talkies. They have the ability
to transmit and receive. They have the ability to convert 1s and
0s into radio waves and then back into 1s and 0s. There are three
big differences between WiFi radios and Walkie-talkies:
· WiFi radios that work with the 802.11b standard transmit
at 2.4 GHz, and those that comply with the 802.11a standard transmit
at 5 GHz. Normal walkie-talkies normally operate at 49 MHz. The
higher frequency allows higher data rates.
· WiFi radios use much more efficient coding techniques that
also contribute to the much higher data rates. The radios used for
WiFi have the ability to change frequencies. 802.11b cards can transmit
directly on any of three bands, or they can split the available
radio bandwidth into dozens of channels and frequency hop rapidly
between them. The advantage of frequency hopping is that it is much
more immune to interference and can allow dozens of WiFi cards to
talk simultaneously without interfering with each other.
Because they are transmitting at much higher frequencies than a
Walkie-Talkie, and because of the encoding techniques, WiFi radios
can handle a lot more data per second. 802.11b can handle up to
11 megabits per second (although 7 megabits per second is more typical,
and 802.11b may fall back as low as 1 or 2 megabits per second if
there is a lot of interference). 802.11a can handle up to 54 megabits
per second (although 30 megabits per second is more typical). Fortunately,
all of this radio technology is hidden in a WiFi card and is completely
invisible.
WiFi, in fact, is one of the easiest technologies that you will
ever use. One of the best things about WiFi is how simple it is.
Many new laptops already come with a WiFi card built in -- in many
cases you don't have to do anything to start using WiFi. A hotspot
is a connection point for a WiFi network. It is a small box that
is hardwired into the Internet. The box contains an 802.11 radio
that can simultaneously talk to up to 100 or so 802.11 cards. There
are many WiFi hotspots now available in public places like restaurants,
hotels, libraries and airports. You can also create your own hotspot
in your home.
WiFi hotspots
can be open or secure. If a hotspot is open, then anyone with a
WiFi card can access the hotspot. If it is secure, then the user
needs to know a WEP key to connect. WEP stands for Wired Equivalent
Privacy, and it is an encryption system for the data that 802.11
sends through the air. WEP has two variations: 64-bit encryption
(really 40-bit) and 128-bit encryption (really 104-bit). 40-bit
encryption was the original standard but was found to be easily
broken. 128-bit encryption is more secure and is what most people
use if they enable WEP. For a casual user, any hotspot that is using
WEP is inaccessible unless you know the WEP key.
If you are setting up a hotspot in your home, you may want to create
and use a 128-bit WEP key to prevent the neighbors from casually
eavesdropping on your network. Whether at home or on the road, you
need to know the WEP key, and then enter it into the WiFi card's
software, to gain access to the network.
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