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While the original amendment is no longer valid, the term "802.11a" is still used by wireless access point (cards and routers) manufacturers to describe interoperability of their systems at 5.8 GHz, 54 Mbit/s (54 x 10 6 bits per second). 802.11 is a set of IEEE standards that govern wireless networking transmission methods. They are commonly ...
Downlink is the throughput from the base station to the user handset or computer. Uplink is the throughput from the user handset or computer to the base station. Range is the maximum range possible to receive data at 25% of the typical rate.
WebCam VGA Web Camera Networking Integrated 802.11 ac Built-in Bluetooth™ V4.0 Integrated 802.11 b/g/n Built-in Bluetooth™ V4.0 10/100/Gigabits Base T Integrated 802.11 b/g/n Built-in Bluetooth™ V4.0 10/100 Base T Built-in Bluetooth™ V4.0 Interface 1 × headphone-out jack (audio-in combo) 1 × USB 3.0 port(s) 1 × USB 2.0 port(s)
But in long-range Wi-Fi, special technologies are used to get the most out of a Wi-Fi connection. The 802.11-2007 standard adds 10 MHz and 5 MHz OFDM modes to the 802.11a standard, and extend the time of cyclic prefix protection from 0.8 μs to 3.2 μs, quadrupling the multipath distortion protection. Some commonly available 802.11a/g chipsets ...
Network detectors or network discovery software [1] are computer programs that facilitate detection of wireless LANs using the 802.11b, 802.11a and 802.11g WLAN standards. [2] Discovering networks may be done through active as well as passive scanning.
Kismet is a network detector, packet sniffer, and intrusion detection system for 802.11 wireless LANs. Kismet will work with any wireless card which supports raw monitoring mode, and can sniff 802.11a, 802.11b, 802.11g, and 802.11n traffic. The program runs under Linux, FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD, and macOS.
Driver 802.11 Bus interface Wireless Security Monitor mode Master modeAd-Hoc mode; a b g n ac ad ax WEP WPA WPA2; acx1xx: No Yes Yes No No ? ? PCI, Mini PCI, PC card, USB: Yes No No Yes
802.11-1997 was the first wireless networking standard in the family, but 802.11b was the first widely accepted one, followed by 802.11a, 802.11g, 802.11n, 802.11ac, and 802.11ax. Other standards in the family (c–f, h, j) are service amendments that are used to extend the current scope of the existing standard, which amendments may also ...