Yes, some of them.
A PDA would only include NOS components if they were designed to work on a network, particularly wireless networks. The more inexpensive PDAs do not do that, and have no network software. The higher end PDAs will have the required software in order to connect to a network.
true
wireless devices can be every device equipped with either 802.11a (5ghz) or 802.11b/g (2.4ghz) radio card they are PCs with wireless NICs; notebooks; PDAs and so on..
wireless devices can be every device equipped with either 802.11a (5ghz) or 802.11b/g (2.4ghz) radio card they are PCs with wireless NICs; notebooks; PDAs and so on..
wireless devices can be every device equipped with either 802.11a (5ghz) or 802.11b/g (2.4ghz) radio card they are PCs with wireless NICs; notebooks; PDAs and so on..
A wireless USB adapter allows a computer or wireless device to connect to a wireless router. It is needed for any device which is not wired to an internet connection, to connect.
can you connect wireless modem to a switch which will to two routers
NICs do not connect to applications, rather they connect to other wireless devices. IEEE 802.1 is the standard used to connect wireless NICs to other network devices.
An ethernet cord to connect the XBox to a router or the wireless adapter for XBox to connect to your wireless router.
Infrared ports, or IRDA, are on many laptops, PDAs and some phones. This is just like BlueTooth or Wifi, but slower. Two PDAs can exchange data this way quite easily.
bluetooth usb/serial port wifi/internet connection universal cradle
No. To find wireless routers, your computer must have a wireless chip in it that will search for signals near you. SO, if you can connect to your own wireless router, you can connect to other wireless router.