Inital standard for WLAN was 802.11 and was published in 1997.
Revisions to the standard are handled by Task Groups. Task Groups are lettered, and any
revisions inherit the letter corresponding to the Task Group. For example, the OFDM
PHY was standardized by Task Group A (TGa), and their revision was called 802.11a.
Similarly for
802.11.b - Direct Sequence Spread Spectrum-Complementary Code Keying @2.4GHZ
802.11.c -- I dont really know whether such thing exists and if no,, don;t know why is it missing.
802.11.d -- scanning
802.11.e -- Quality of Service
802.11.f -- Inter Access Point Protocol
802.11.g -- OFDM @ 2.4GHz
802.11.h -- Dynamic Frequency Selection-Transmit Power Control
802.11.i -- security ... and so on
Speed. b has a maximum speed of 11 Mb(its)/s; g has a maximum of 54 mb/s.
The address of the Dpl-Woodbury Branch is: 3265 Federal Boulevard, Denver, 80211 3211
nothing 802.11 is a rfc for wifi communication appletalk is a proprietary protocol used for communication between mac computers
The address of the Children'S Museum Of Denver is: 2121 Childrens Museum Dr, Denver, CO 80211-5221
The address of the Denver Metropolitan Chapter Of The American Historical Socie is: 2727 Bryant St, Denver, CO 80211
The address of the Clear Creek Canyon Historical Society Of Chaffee County is: Po Box 704, Buena Vista, CO 80211
The address of the Denvers Ocean Journey Inc is: 700 Water St, Denver, CO 80211-5210
Hi folks,as BT 3.0 and 4.0 use the 802.11 MAC/PHY for data transfers I wonder which encryption is used for this kind of connections? Is it still E0, AES or any other encryption standard?Moreover: How is the encryption key for the data link exchanged? Is the BT control channel used for that (secured by E0)?Cheers
There are several: 80201, 80202, 80203, 80204, 80205, 80206, 80207, 80208, 80209, 80210, 80211, 80212, 80214, 80215, 80216, 80217, 80218, 80219, 80220, 80221, 80222, 80223, 80224, 80225, 80226, 80227, 80228, 80229, 80230, 80231, 80232, 80233, 80234, 80235, 80236, 80237, 80238, 80239, 80241, 80243, 80244, 80246, 80248, 80249, 80250, 80251, 80252, 80254, 80255, 80256, 80257, 80259, 80260, 80261, 80262, 80263, 80264, 80265, 80266, 80270, 80271, 80273, 80274, 80275, 80279, 80280, 80281, 80290, 80291, 80292, 80293, 80294, 80295, 80299.
In simple terms, you have two hardware devices that make up wireless connections. First, you have a Wireless Access Point or AP or WAP. A wireless access point is simply a wireless hub. An AP has antennas for sending and receiving the wireless signal to other wireless devices and it also has a cat 5 connection for connecting to the network.The other device is a Wireless NIC. Wireless NIC's are manufactured for both desktop and laptop applications, however, the laptop NIC's are more popular. The wireless NIC's have a built-in antenna and it is also sends and receives signals. 802.11b/g devices send and receive at 2.4GHz.Absolutely fantastic! A friend of mine would bring over his laptop & while I sat with my desktops poorly performing internet connection, he'd be connected through a anonymous IP that was lucky to have been useful in getting his Apple Mac online & with great download speeds. Lucky, considering that they somehow had their radiation permeating into the inner spaces of my home.In fact, I should investigate whether or not the dangerous, brain zapping, wireless radiation is still violating the spaces of my inner sanctum. Imagine that, it's their produced & marketed product, yet my private property is infiltrated by it without any benefit produced other than the billions they rake in while emanating their intrusively trespassing, dangerous radiationHonestly, I am going to wrap some tin foil around my head and pray the aliens don't get me.
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