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Wireless Home Networking - Index of

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74<br />

Part II: Making Plans<br />

Figure 4-1:<br />

A network<br />

can use<br />

both<br />

wireless<br />

and wired<br />

connections.<br />

<strong>Wireless</strong> PC<br />

AP<br />

Choosing a wireless technology<br />

After you know what you’re networking and what will be on your wireless network,<br />

you have to decide how to network wirelessly. As we discuss extensively<br />

in Chapter 2, four main variants <strong>of</strong> wireless networking technologies<br />

exist: 802.11a, 802.11b, 802.11g and 802.11n (draft standard).<br />

Collectively, all these technologies are usually referred to as Wi-Fi, which isn’t<br />

a generic term, but, rather, refers to a certification <strong>of</strong> interoperability. The<br />

folks at the Wi-Fi Alliance (www.wi-fi.org) do extensive testing <strong>of</strong> new wireless<br />

gear to make sure that it works seamlessly with wireless equipment from different<br />

manufacturers. When it works, it gets the Wi-Fi logo on the box, so you<br />

can rest assured that it works in your network.<br />

Wi-Fi certified gear works together — as long as it’s <strong>of</strong> a compatible type. That<br />

means that any 802.11b, 802.11g, or 802.11n Wi-Fi certified gear works with<br />

any other equipment <strong>of</strong> that type; similarly, any 802.11a Wi-Fi certified gear<br />

works with any other 802.11a and 5 GHz capable 802.11n gear that has been<br />

certified. (Note that not all 802.11n gear is 5 GHz capable — if a particular<br />

piece <strong>of</strong> equipment supports this, it will say so and will also be 802.11a certified.)<br />

802.11b and g gear does not work with 802.11a gear, even if it has all<br />

been certified because they work on different radio frequencies and cannot<br />

communicate with each other.<br />

The discussion <strong>of</strong> wireless technology quickly degenerates into a sea <strong>of</strong><br />

acronyms and technospeak. If you need a refresher on this alphabet soup —<br />

or to begin from square one — Chapter 2 is a primer on jargon, abbreviations,<br />

and other nuts-and-bolts issues.<br />

For home users, the three most important practical differences between<br />

802.11a, 802.11b, 802.11g, and 802.11n networks are speed, price, and<br />

compatibility:<br />

Hub<br />

Wire<br />

PC

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