Wireless standard A and Dual-Band N.
802.11a
802.11n and 802.11a
5Ghz
There are actually two of them. First one is type A working at 5Ghz and second is type G working at 2.4Ghz.802.11a & 802.11g
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..
exactly what you mean in question. wireless is a broad subject for example wireless LANs enable you to build computer networks without wires. IEEE standards for wireless LANs are 802.11a (5ghz) and 802.11b/g (2.4ghz)
No
You can use any wireless card for your new computer. The linksys router uses the same standard for wireless internet as all the other routers. Any modern wireless card will do.
The Audio Technica wireless headset microphone uses a standard mini jack that is found on all computers and stereos.
IrDA
It means that the wireless network adapter supports both 802.11b (2.4GHz) and 802.11a (5GHz) frequencies. 802.11b was the first mainstream wireless networking solution. 802.11a was mostly used in corporate environments where throughput was more important than range.