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Wireless Home Networking - Index of

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30<br />

Part I: <strong>Wireless</strong> <strong>Networking</strong> Fundamentals<br />

� <strong>Wireless</strong> network cameras: The D-Link DCS-5300G (www.dlink.com/<br />

products/?sec=1&pid=342) lets you not only view your home when<br />

you’re away but also pan, tilt, scan, and zoom your way around the<br />

home. That’s a nanny-cam.<br />

� Entertainment systems: NETGEAR’s EVA8000 Digital Entertainer HD<br />

enables you to use wireless technology to stream music, video, movies,<br />

photos, and Internet radio stations from your computer or file server to<br />

your home stereo system. The system uses a computer on your home<br />

network as a source, which stores your CDs in the MP3 (or other) electronic<br />

format, and attaches just like a CD or DVD player to your home<br />

entertainment system.<br />

Most consumer manufacturers are trying to network-enable their devices, so<br />

expect to see everything from your washer and dryer to your vacuum cleaner<br />

network-enabled at some point. Why? Because after such appliances are on a<br />

network, they can be monitored for breakdowns, s<strong>of</strong>tware upgrades, and so<br />

on without your having to manually monitor them.<br />

Network infrastructure<br />

Workstations must be electronically interconnected to communicate. The<br />

equipment over which the network traffic (electronic signals) travels<br />

between computers on the network is the network infrastructure.<br />

Network hubs<br />

In a typical <strong>of</strong>fice network, a strand <strong>of</strong> wiring similar to phone cable is run<br />

from each computer to a central location, such as a phone closet, where each<br />

wire is connected to a network hub. The network hub, similar conceptually<br />

to the hub <strong>of</strong> a wheel, receives signals transmitted by each computer on the<br />

network and sends the signals out to all other computers on the network.<br />

Figure 2-1 illustrates a network with a star-shaped topology (the physical<br />

design <strong>of</strong> a network). Other network topologies include ring and bus. <strong>Home</strong><br />

networks typically use a star topology because it’s the simplest to install and<br />

troubleshoot.<br />

Bridges<br />

A network bridge provides a pathway for network traffic between networks or<br />

segments <strong>of</strong> networks. A device that connects a wireless network segment to<br />

a wired network segment is a type <strong>of</strong> network bridge. In larger networks, network<br />

bridges are sometimes used to connect networks on different floors in<br />

the same building or in different buildings. In a wireless home network, the<br />

device that manages the wireless network, the access point, <strong>of</strong>ten acts as a<br />

bridge between a wireless segment <strong>of</strong> the network and a wired segment.

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