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Wireless Home Networking - Index of

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� 802.11b is an older standard that is no longer used these days. You would<br />

be hard pressed to find any 802.11b in your network, and only if you have<br />

been buying legacy equipment at flea markets or electronic junk yards.<br />

� 802.11g equipment has been the standard in use for a few years. Thanks<br />

to its proliferation, it’s inexpensive but at least four times faster than<br />

802.11b.<br />

� 802.11a can still be found in some special-use corporate environments,<br />

but it’s no longer used in the home. It is as fast as 802.11g, costs much<br />

more, and has a shorter range.<br />

� 802.11n is five times faster than 802.11a and 802.11g and is 22 times<br />

faster than 802.11b.<br />

� 802.11a and 802.11b are not compatible.<br />

� 802.11a and 802.11g are not compatible.<br />

� 802.11b and 802.11g are compatible.<br />

Chapter 4: Planning a <strong>Wireless</strong> <strong>Home</strong> Network<br />

� 802.11n is compatible with all other standards but at the cost <strong>of</strong> its<br />

higher speed — when you add 802.11a, b, or g gear to an 802.11n network,<br />

you slow down the ultimate throughput or speed <strong>of</strong> that network.<br />

The 802.11n standard is compatible with all other standards, but not all 802.11n<br />

equipment supports both the 2.4 GHz (802.11b and g) and 5 GHz (802.11a) frequencies<br />

— many support only 2.4 GHz. An AP that includes 802.11n should<br />

work with any other device as well (though not always at the higher 248 Mbps<br />

speed <strong>of</strong> 802.11n). Thus, you don’t have to look for a multimode AP.<br />

If your primary reason for networking the computers in your house is to<br />

enable Internet sharing, 802.11g is more than fast enough because your<br />

Internet connection probably won’t exceed the 54 Mbps <strong>of</strong> the 802.11g connection<br />

any time soon — unless you’re one <strong>of</strong> the lucky few who lives where<br />

fiber-optic Internet services (such as Verizon’s FiOS service) are installed.<br />

Despite the fact that most Internet services are slower than 802.11g, we don’t<br />

recommend that you buy only 802.11g gear. 802.11g is being superseded by<br />

802.11n with full 802.11g compatibility. In fact, you would save only a few<br />

bucks by buying 802.11g gear new. The speed, range, and compatibility <strong>of</strong><br />

802.11n are more than worth the increased price tag.<br />

802.11g is the minimum standard around which you should build your network.<br />

If you want to hedge your bets, look for an 802.11n AP that can handle all Wi-<br />

Fi technology standards. Apple, Belkin, NETGEAR, D-Link, and several other<br />

leading manufacturers <strong>of</strong> wireless home networking equipment already <strong>of</strong>fer<br />

802.11n wireless devices.<br />

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