For a wireless connection to be successful, its client and access point must meet in three settings. Th settings are: SSID, authentication (MD5 checksum and antennae type), and the encryption key (MAC address filters).
probing
CCQ: This is an index of which evaluates the wireless Client Connection Quality.
Two purposes: 1. Wireless Client Isolation prevents one Wireless Client connected to an access point to communicate with another one connected to the same access point. (This is a typical requirement on Hot Spots, for instance, or in Corporate Environments with high security needs.) 2. It helps to prevent brute force attacks on clients' user names and passwords
It has an access point which transmit signal to the client and receive.
The wireless connection is good
If an access point receives data from a client station, it sends an acknowledgment to the client that the data has been received, this acknowledgment keeps the client from assuming that a collision occurred and prevent a data retransmission by the client.
the answer is a VPN. A virtual private network will give you the same access to a network as a network client . The reduced speed is the result of the connection to the network being a remote access connection.
I would suggest you to keep the default settings.
The modem and wireless router are out of sync with each other (DHCP CLIENT) isn't connecting. This is a simple fix. Unplug the power to both devices, plug the modem back in first, and plug the router back in AFTER the modem is fully booted back up.
SSID
The function of a wireless access point is to allow wireless devices such as projectors, laptops and PDAs to access a local area network. Wireless access points mainly act as switches to spread connections wirelessly. The difference between an access point and a router is that access points do not assign IP addresses nor do they have firewalls; they only lock out traffic that does not have the wireless key.
no they have to be allowed to access the network.