The Coming Time for 802.11a? 196
abhikhurana writes "
This article on 80211-planet.com predicts a real boom in the market for 802.11a in the coming year. An excerpt from the article:
In tests in my SOHO LAN, I found that in real world conditions, 802.11a averaged four times faster than 802.11b. In addition, with its 5GHz frequency, 802.11a avoids the interference slow-downs that b must suffer with microwave ovens, high-end wireless phones, and other 802.11b networks.
Also makes an interesting read for knowing about the technologies which maybe driving the wireless bandwagon in the coming years."
I see a boom if and only if (Score:1, Interesting)
the non US world (Score:4, Informative)
intel had to get a licence for London Fashion Week where they did video streaming of differant shows
not sure about china or taiwan anyone know
regards
John Jones
Re:I see a boom if and only if (Score:2, Informative)
Re:I see a boom if and only if (Score:1)
LINKSYS WAP51AB [linksys.com] $245
DWL-6000AP [dlink.com]$275
oh good, another upgrade... (Score:2)
bigger faster better more, the endless pursuit "just because we can."
This just sucks... when can i buy it?
Re:oh good, another upgrade... (Score:2)
But what happens when you want to transfer files between two machines on your network? I also saturate my cable connection but between machines is where I really see a difference when upping the connection rate. I can't wait to go totally wireless and trade my spiders nest of wires for a brain tumor.
Re:oh good, another upgrade... (Score:1)
But with 5.0GHz we have to watch out for aliens in other dimentions seeing our subspace signatures and trying to open a vortex to their world.
Either way it's better then drilling holes in my house.
Re:oh good, another upgrade... (Score:1)
Damnit. (Score:2)
Now hear this..... (Score:1)
Hell, I still use Wavelan for my wireless gunk and I see no need to upgrade.
downsides .... (Score:1)
Switching Over (Score:4, Insightful)
Though some will probably opt for both, as many businesses use b, and won't want to spend the money to replace all the cards in all the laptops.
I wonder when Apple will produce 802.11a cards, and if they'll support a & b.
Re:Switching Over (Score:4, Informative)
http://thinksecret.com/news/airportupdates.html
Re:Switching Over (Score:2)
With everyone running around with differing 802.11 hardware, not much of a revolution's gonna happen.
Re:Switching Over (Score:2)
Think of it - 26 different businesses within 150 feet of each other, totally not interfering...
Of course, the Wireless Initiatives may suffer from lack of compatible access points.
Re:Switching Over (Score:1)
the range is also a definite issue. for home use it's not a big deal, but the value of wireless isn't home use.
Re:Switching Over (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Switching Over (Score:2)
Re:Switching Over (Score:2)
Do it as quickly or as slow as you like.
In other words, your situation will dictate the pace at which you convert, or if you do at all. It doesn't have to happen all at once because the versions can coexist indefinately. If you are beginning a rolout or expansion you will obviously have to make a choice if you are going to support one technology or both.
Choosing to support one or the other limits your options in the future, but choosing to support both is more expensive. That's how it always is.
how about XP running third-party WLAN software. (Score:3, Interesting)
How are we going to adopt a technology when MS is deciding for the users what is best.
How about instead of XP deciding to take over for all WLAN third-party software and FORCING you to use an encryption key, let's let the fucking USERS decide what THEY want to do and what software THEY want to use.
Ever since switching to XP (from Win2k) as the host for my WLAN (Dlink DWL-650s in ad-hoc) I have had nothing but poor connectivity.
XP has been reporting that the WLAN is down even if it is working just fine. It won't let me use third-party software to control the WLAN. It forces me to have a network key (it would be different if the range on these cards was over the 25' from the host machine to the furthest reach of the signal).
Just my fucking rant on how MS and their "users are dumb" is really messing w/ME!
Re:how about XP running third-party WLAN software. (Score:4, Informative)
Snag a couple of Lucent Orinoco Silver cards on eBay -- they go for a song these days -- and plug them into the DLink PCI carriers you're already using. You'll instantly see a 50% or more improvement in effective working range.
I can second that... (Score:3, Informative)
Things became much better when I started using a proper AP.
Later on, I needed a WLAN card for my desktop. After a BAD runin with a D-Link DWL-520 that I promptly returned, I tried a Orinoco and PCI carrier. The PCI adapter didn't work to well on my desktop. (Fine under Linux, useless in Windows) I returned the PCI adapter, but because the Orinoco had seemed to give slightly better performance and was supported by Netstumbler, I kept it.
A few weeks later I pulled out the D-Link once again for comparison - At that point I realized just how bad it was.
Side-by-side in the same place, the Orinoco blew away the D-Link. Orinoco reports a "good" signal strength upstairs. The D-Link barely gets signal. Downstairs, the D-Link reports low signal strength IN THE SAME ROOM AS THE AP! The Orinoco is pegged at full strength in this case.
I'm sticking with Orinocos from now on...
Re:I can second that... (Score:2)
I have read the reviews online, I knew what I was getting into, the cards are not the problem.
Re:how about XP running third-party WLAN software. (Score:1)
How are we going to adopt a technology when MS is deciding for the users what is best.
That's easy...L-I-N-U-X
Re:how about XP running third-party WLAN software. (Score:2)
Re:how about XP running third-party WLAN software. (Score:4, Informative)
XP doesn't forbid the use of 3rd party WLAN configuration software (I am running Orinoco's Client Manager).
It also doesn't require an encryption key. I turn mine off once in a while to allow others easy access.
Works with no encryption, 64 bit or 128. XP controls none of this...the WAP does
Re:how about XP running third-party WLAN software. (Score:3, Informative)
The DLink cards may be below par but they work for the setup that we have here. The only reason for the problems is XP.
It doesn't FORBID the use of third-party software no, but it is built in and wants you to use that instead (causing WLAN manuf's to tell you to use XP instead of their product).
I just tested it before posting this. On a Win2k machine the network stays up at 11mbs w/o a hitch.
On the XP machine it stays under 5.5mbs and every 5 to 10 mins I have to RESCAN the network for it to find the connection.
Everytime I open the XP tray icon for the WLAN connection it yells at me telling me that I do NOT have an encryption key set and it sits there blinking on the prompt. I click for it to not use the key and click Apply, Ok, and when I open it again, alas it is back.
XP is forcing me to do two things I don't want to do. I don't like it. I don't like the fact that MS is dummying even WLAN setup down.
The DLink software worked fine (it still works fine on the Win98 clients). I don't see why MS had to include it's own happy horseshit and degrade my connection.
Re:how about XP running third-party WLAN software. (Score:1)
I consistently get an 11Mbps connection virtually everywhere in my (rather large) house.
I use a Linksys Access Point....I had a Dlink (it sucked and so did the support).
The Dlink's aren't worth the time you are spending on them.
Re:how about XP running third-party WLAN software. (Score:2)
* After switching to XP problems began. *
* When using Win2k to host the network there are no problems *
And a new finding, when using Win98 to host the network, there are no problems.
Re:how about XP running third-party WLAN software. (Score:2)
Your obviously having driver problems/configuration, and some PEBCAK as well. I would suggest a)buying a new lan card or b) going back to win2k if you can't get XP working right.
XP, Prism2, Orinoco (Score:2)
But if you want to use decent hardware (Orinoco), XP has built-in drivers and you're in for a fight.
Re:how about XP running third-party WLAN software. (Score:2)
I connected to my home network with WEP disabled last night. Had to since I was setting up a new Access point.
Sounds to me like you are asking why you have to have a name for your network, that is because the spec says you have to.
The big advantage of having XP take over the 802 management is that it makes it much easier to swap card on the laptop. For example I can pull out one of my Wavelan cards and plug in a Cisco card and everything will work without having to reconfigure.
The other big advantage is that if you have the right access point XP has a bunch of fixes embedded in the O/S that allow the brokeness of 802.11 WEP to be avoided.
How long ? (Score:4, Insightful)
Since '92 I've just been happy to stay 1-2 generations behind to keep the cost down.
Nice... (Score:5, Informative)
My personal feeling about this: The U.S. government should sponsor a 802.11a nationwide network, so we can all have cell phone and data access anywhere, and a provider can 'buy' an area from the government to charge wireless rates for. Kind of like the current system we have in place for land-line phones.
Everyone comes out happy:
the cell phone company has a local monopoly
the customer has access to wireless data and phone everywhere
the government 's pocket gets fatter.
Re:Nice... (Score:1)
the cell phone company has a local monopoly
There's the problem with your statement. Monopoly. That's a 4-letter word nowadays. I don't see how that would be good for customers though. If there's only one provider, what if they decide to be evil and charge exorbitant rates? People would have no choice then, and have to pay the rates, or go without something they've grown used to (*cough* Road Runner *cough* Time Warner *cough*).
I do agree that the government should help install a wireless infrastructure, make it able to be easily upgradeable to the latest and greatest, and backward compatible for those who are happy with their 802.11b. But after the infrastructure is laid, back off. I don't want to have the government controlling my wireless access. Sell it to whomever can afford it, but don't limit it to one vendor in an area. Let many of them do it. Drive the price down, and stimulate cash inflow. Seems like everyone wins.
Re: Not 802.11a... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: Not 802.11a... (Score:3, Interesting)
This seems to be the conventional wisdom, but the technical specs indicate that at a given range a is faster, and that they both drop off at roughly the same range.
Can anyone point out any docs that show why a should have a shorter range in practice? Is it just because 5GHz is not as effective at penetrating barriers?
-Peter
Re:Nice... (Score:2)
5 Ghz? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:5 Ghz? (Score:4, Informative)
Name everything you can think of that interferes with 2.4 GHz band.
Here goes... Wireless phones, microwave ovens, satellite TV, wireless broadband, medical equipment, cell phones.. There's a huge list because the frequency mixes high enough bandwidth and fairly good range at low power.
Now, let's try 5 GHz.
Short list, huh.
Not much is there yet because there's the wall problem. With computers and the 11a ability to down-negotiate bandwidth, it can be tolerated and handled. Not much else can do that.
Re:5 Ghz? (Score:2)
Short list, huh.
Short list now... But if this 5 GHz Wi-Fi device can be used for the home/office according to FCC rules (or whatever the hell regulates wireless frequency usages), then why would cordless phone manufacturers, etc, not try to migrate to the new available frequency (aside from the wall problem, which can be solved multiple ways with a bit of programming, and good protocol development) to get away from the interference of the 2.4GHz band? If there isn't interference now, there will be, since the FCC will allow all devices with a certain class rating to use that frequency...
Re:5 Ghz? (Score:3, Informative)
The FCC rules solely dictate the following:
1. The frequencies that are available for unrestricted use;
2. The maximum peak power that you can put out onto thsoe frequencies;
3. These unlicensed devices must not created and must accept harmful interference.
The 802.11a specification merely defines the radio frequencies used, the format of the transmission, and the procedures for downgrading and upgrading the given bandwidth.
Besides that, protocol development is expensive and/or time-consuming (and really overkill for a damned phone), and the wall problem is inherent to the frequency and power requirements. The only ways around the wall problem are either breaking the FCC rules or spending lots of money on multiple base stations or on enhanced protocol development.
Re:5 Ghz? (Score:1)
Re:5 Ghz? (Score:2)
Which is kind of a killer, isn't it? At least I can turn off my microwave and hang up my cordless phone. The walls are a bit more difficult to disable. What's the possible point of having wireless net access if I still need to have line-of-sight connectivity?
Re:5 Ghz? (Score:1)
Shooting the signal over a luddite neighbor's land without his consent or knowledge?
With good enough antennas, you should be able to get this going 200-300 feet or more line of site, neglecting rain, which is more of a problem than with 802.11b.
Also, if your walls are non-metallic and non-conductive, they are going to be pretty invisible to the radio most likely.
The truth is buried in the article (Score:5, Interesting)
I don't even buy the argument that homeowners just now getting wireless should get 802.11a equipment: they can't take their wireless cards and use them at public [houstonwireless.org] or private [t-mobilebroadband.com] 802.11b access points. Why pay extra for something you can only use at home, when you can get something cheaper that works all over the US? It would be like buying a cellular phone that only worked in your neighborhood.
There is already support for people with 802.11b (Score:4, Informative)
Re:There is already support for people with 802.11 (Score:2)
The device you point out is an access point, not a card. Buying a combo 802.11a/b access point means you have to have 802.11a access *cards*, or else your money on the a/b access point was wasted - and you should have just gotten an 802.11b access point. But if you have 802.11a cards, then you can't use them at the public/private access points away from your house/job - like at coffee shops all over the place these days. So these combo access points really don't help much.
I'd be happy with bluetooth AND 802.11b ? (Score:4, Interesting)
that would make alot of people Very happy
regards
john jones
p.s. bluetooth phone dialup when your not in the office and 802.11b for when you are
Bluetooth and 802.11b Interference Resolved (Score:3, Informative)
"Quick fix will let one avoid interfering with the other"
Re:The truth is buried in the article (Score:2)
Re:The truth is buried in the article (Score:4, Informative)
Google and ye shall receive [80211-planet.com].
My 802.11b is slower than my grandma! (Score:1)
Oh well, I really shouldn't complain. OS X is unbelieveable. It's like running linux but having real commercial apps available (Photoshop, Flash, Dreamweaver, InDesign, Acrobat(full),
Higher frequencies are a beautiful thing... (Score:4, Informative)
Other advantages of the 5 MHz frequency are that the same antenna you use for 2.4 can be used at almost double gain (as long as you're careful), since the wavelength is almost half as long you can use the same antenna. The thoroughput kills 11b by a factor of 5 to 1 at max.
Disadvantages... At 5 MHz, walls are a factor. Objects start to interefere more. So on a campsite, 11a will be amazing. In an office, you'll need repeaters. Hardware costs more right now, on par with what 11b cost at first.. then again, you can get 11b cards right now for under $50.. even Orinocos for under $60.
Re:Higher frequencies are a beautiful thing... (Score:1)
Given that most people have cable modems or DSL to the house at best.. 11b is a good solution on all counts. I have seen VERY few cases of interferrence from phones and things. Most times these are temporary and result in the user loosing speed
Re:Higher frequencies are a beautiful thing... (Score:3, Insightful)
5Mhz goes through walls like a hot knife through butter. 5Ghz on the other hand...
802.11b is good enough (Score:5, Insightful)
I won't be upgrading until there is a compelling reason, and I can't see there being one for at least the next 3-5 years.
-josh
more than! (Score:1)
I need the wireless"ness" more than access to larger pipe.
I came. I bought. I'm done.
Re:802.11b is good enough (Score:1)
fast enough all the time on 802.11b. I've
even used it to update my gentoo laptop.
--Rodney
Re:802.11b is good enough (Score:2)
While I do have a cable modem with good speed, I also have three kids and a wife who have started to get active online.
While the 802.11b may outstrip *MY* usage of the cable, if all 5 people hit at once, it starts to get a little iffy.
Not to sound stupid but.... (Score:2)
Why does this "a" thing sound newer?
Re:Not to sound stupid but.... (Score:1)
Comment #2437007 [slashdot.org] by Pii
Not sure why 11b got popular and 11a didn't. You are in luck...
The reason is because there is some component overlap between 802.11b and Digital Cellular industry, so far as the radios go, so manufacturers could take advantage of economies of scale, and didn't have to develop any new technology. This allowed for more rapid deployment, and attractive pricing.
Re:Not to sound stupid but.... (Score:2)
Steven
Oh no, my music autopause won't work. (Score:3, Interesting)
Seriously, webcams, phones, baby monitors all can clobber 802.11b pretty badly. I can't wait for affordable dual mode so I can put the multmedia machine at least in the 5 Ghz range. Home users with lots of tech toys are going to be much happier with 802.11a. 802.11g will do nothing for them.
Poster mentions 802.11a, but... (Score:4, Insightful)
That is my two cents. Of course, the big variable is when 802.11g recieves finalized specs. 802.11a is already there.
One more question for the grou: I have read a lot (for a Business Analyst) about wireless networking and have yet to see a place which explains the "lettering system" used by the 802.11 products. Why are a, b, and g given those names? Are there 802.11c and d awaiting consideration?
Re:Poster mentions 802.11a, but... (Score:2)
Do a Google search and you'll get the answer. 802.11d is a set of protocol addons to 802.11b to enable it to work where 802.11b is illegal, for example. More info here. [80211-planet.com]
Re:Poster mentions 802.11a, but... (Score:2)
And how long.... (Score:5, Insightful)
802.11a is not the wave of the future. It's going to be a nice for those hardcore who absolutely need obscene speed and live in an interference-prone environment.
It has to compete against the HUGE installed base of 11b hardware that is *far cheaper* than 11a and is more than adequate for 90% of the people out there.
I was thinking of upgrading to 11a since I happen to be a power user - But that means that the card I bought would be useless on most networks I might roam to (such as my former college's wireless network). In the end, 11b won out because:
a) I already had some 11b equipment
b) My parents had 11b equipment
c) I have never had problems with 11b interference - Spread spectrum is pretty resistant to CW interference (Microwave ovens - People could run microwaves all they want in my apartment and I wouldn't notice any difference on my network.) and 900 MHz analog is "good enough" for me in the cordless phone arena, which means that the most famous 802.11b interference culprit (2.4 GHz phones) isn't present.
d) 11b hardware was a helluva lot cheaper than 11a hardware.
Cordless phones aren't that bad anyway... (Score:2)
Now maybe if there were other phones or something in the area it'd be a problem, but I'm just not seeing it.
Guess not all 2.4GHz phones are bad... (Score:2)
Bringing down the price (Score:4, Insightful)
Personally I'm hedging my bets on systems that offload most of the processing to the host CPU like the stuff Microsoft is working on [geek.com]. It allows not only for cheaper hardware, but also gives more flexibility and upgradability (care to upgrade your Wifi setup to 100mbit with a software update?) The only thing that could potentially go wrong with this technology is if Microsoft tries to abuse its position and fails to release open specs for the hardware or releases proprietary (or no) drivers for non-Windows operating systems. However, given their commitment to FreeBSD it's quite possible that they'll go ahead and release some BSD-licensed reference drivers for FreeBSD which can be ported to other architectures.
microsoft & freebsd? was:Bringing down the pri (Score:1, Insightful)
did i miss the memo? the only thing i know that connects microsoft to freebsd is the fact that they used portions of the tcp/ip code in win2k.
Re:microsoft & freebsd? was:Bringing down the (Score:1)
that's not flamebait. flamebait would be *complaining* that they used portions of the bsd tcp/ip code in win2k etc. flamebait would be imprecating them for that. flamebait would be using a dirty name or word. flamebait would be insulting the bsd license that allows such use.
i did none of the above.
i just simply stated what the only connection i know of between the two was. i suppose i could get linkage to illustrate, but it's pretty common knowledge.
i don't know if they currently use the stack in xp. haven't tried ftp on it.
i am still curious to know what commitment microsoft has to bsd. i've never heard of such a thing. they've had an off-and-on commitment to SCO (flamebait warning: yuck.) but that's the closest they come, i think.
802.11b and 2.4GHz phones (Score:3, Interesting)
If I was sitting normal in a chair and using the computer, no problems.
I see this a a bigger push from 802.11b, as the 11a components will now demand the high price, 11b components will drop even more.... eeeexcellent Smithers.
Range Issues (Score:3, Insightful)
802.11a -- A personal heck. (Score:5, Informative)
The real world:
That said, a small office or home that can be covered by a single unit should work acceptably. I would wait for 802.11g before installing a large number of units based on 802.11a, especially for any core business use.
Re:802.11a -- A personal heck. (Score:2)
Eeek - I assume you know about HIPAA regulations [hipaacomply.com], which certainly don't allow unencrypted patient data to be sent wirelessly?
Why won't cordless phones affect 802.11a? (Score:2)
I ask because I know VTech (and so other manufacturers, probably) are selling 5.8 phones [vtechphones.com] now, which I assume are operating in the high band.
range? (Score:1)
A small correction (Score:1)
So hey, sorry for the ommited of
Range/Lack of Need/Repeat problems (Score:2)
Range will, however, be hurt. Wireless becomes pointless as the range diminishes. Range matters in some ways more than excessive bandwidth. Beyond 11 Megabit, it certainly doesn't matter much. For 95% of the applications out there, the extra bandwidth is unnecessary. I am able to stream extremely high quality video content through that to a handful of users on a single access point. Accessing things through network shares are still a pain in the ass at 100 megabit, so the added pain of 11 megabit most of the time isn't enough to make the sacrifice. As they say, 802.11g looks more promising, but in any event I can for about a hundred bucks set up a wireless system and client with 802.11b that suites all my needs. Why bother?
radio networking... (Score:1)
Speed Doesn't Affect Home Usability; Distance Does (Score:4, Insightful)
Distance affects usability, of course - if the thing can't talk from the living room to the bedroom, that's a problem. But speed isn't enough to justify the extra cost for most home users.
Business is a different matter - there you often have enough machines sharing a server in the same building that total bandwidth matters.
Re:Speed Doesn't Affect Home Usability; Distance D (Score:2)
Let's see, would I rather dl Win2k SP3 from microsoft 3 times, or 1 time and copy it to the other two computers at 100Mbps? Tough question.
Bandwidth to the internet is not always a bottleneck.
Re:Speed Doesn't Affect Home Usability; Distance D (Score:2)
Worst penetration (Score:1)
Actually, 802.11b has better penetration at the same power, mainly becouse 5GHz iterferes with concrete walls even more than 2.4GHz
Maybe a microwave oven will force you to go as low as 1MB/s, but for sharing a ADSL connection (what I use it for) it is more than enough, plus I get the extra distance. 802.11a born dead...
Just a note (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Just a note (Score:2)
Take a service monitor to any store or any microwave for that matter and watch.. you see RF energy and leakage that is well below the federal regulations but you do have leakage. enough to screw up your 2.4gig phone (add noise) or drop that 802.11b connection for a bit.
ALL microwave ovens leak some RF energy.
Re:Just a note (Score:3, Informative)
Implemented an access point (Score:2)
802.11a has a noticably shorter range than does
If it were me, I'd stay with 802.11b until
On the plus side, all of our Thinkpad notebooks with built-in 802.11b work effortlessly with the D-Link access point. I've got three systems (two notebooks, one desktop) with the 802.11a cards in them and half a dozen Thinkpads with 802.11b either built in or with cards and it all works very well.
There are companies that use this unlicensed band (Score:2)
Andrew makes a line of dishes for this band that are very popular.
Not all countries are a buy in yet. Careful! (Score:2, Informative)
China, Europe etc all have issues with Radar interference in the 5Ghz band. Only when the military people in each of the various markets sign on will there be widespread 802.11a penetration. The technology is there, no question about it, it's the regulatory issue that is the holdup. Lobby your govt in the respective countries to get it approved. Until then, volume manufacturing will always favor 802.11b/g for now.
range range range (Score:2)
device. Bandwidth deteriorates quicky as you move behind walls.
That was my experience with 802.11a. There should be intermediate solution @ 3.2 ghz or around there, so people can get better range out of their devices. 802.11a, is to be used as replacement of inhouse networks, nothing more.
I guess this is great for cafes and alike due to reduced range, they don't have to step on each
ones toes...
2c,
p.
Do you really need 802.11a? (Score:2)
There was once a time when everyone had Ethernet, and all was good, if a tad bit slow.
When FastEthernet came out, there was some initial hand wringing, but pretty much everyone has moved to FastEthernet and declared it The Standard. Since it was the prevailiing technology at the time that computers with integrated networking were starting to come out in droves, FastEthernet has achieved critical mass.
Now, Gigabit Ethernet is out, but no average home user will ever see it in his computer. He's not likely going to need that high performance, and is certainly not willing to pay for it. It's a specialty application product.
Similarly, the older 802.11 wireless cards (2 MBit) was a good thing at the time they came out; but they were still a bit too slow.
When 802.11b came out, the performance reached a good level for the most common wireless use. And the price is pretty darned good. And since most laptops with integrated wireless come with 802.11b, it is achieving (has achieved?) critical mass. (Or is that critical mess?)
Although 802.11a is now available, they are too expensive and have not yet achieved the interoperability track record of 802.11b. And, besides, if you have a portable wireless network application, you probably don't need the higher speed. Really now, when was the last time you compiled your kernel over wireless? Or streamed video from a server to watch it on your laptop while you're seated at your comfy couch?
The world got along fine with Plain Old Telephone Service for a 100 years.
Now, wired FastEthernet, and wireless 802.11b is the "pretty good and cheap" solution for the masses.
No Linux support (Score:2)
I need the extra bandwidth because I use the wireless to stream video (divx) on a daily basis. 11 Mbps is barely adequate and often causes jerkiness in high quality video. So I did some reasearch on 802.11a to find the one best supported by Linux. The result? There is *no* support for any 802.11a cards as far as I could tell. So I didn't buy any.
Some of these companies need to figure out that early adopters are also people likely to use Linux...
Utter bullshit (Score:2)
802.11a is horrible. The testing I've done for my company indicates that the highest actual throughput you'll get with an access point is 8Mb. The highest you'll get ad-hoc is 18 (which is actually pretty good).
The problem is that kind of throughput is only possible when the system is right next to the AP or when the two systems are practically touching. If you walk a few meters and have line-of-site, you'll be able to get +10Mb throughput with the two adapters in ad-hoc, but if you go around a corner it drops off radically.
Now, why does 802.11a have such a problem with corners? Because the higher frequency transmissions will not bounce as well. Rather than diffracting like 2.4GHz transmissions do (diffraction is the bending of a wave around an obstruction), the radio waves bounce, diffuse, etc. Basically, the signal breaks up.
802.11b, though (and 802.11g) will route around obstructions better because of the lower frequency. The lower the frequency, the more diffractive the signal. I predict 802.11a will be passed over for 802.11g. Especially because 802.11g is backwards compatible. The real panacea will be cards that work with 802.11a/b/g. They'll have to have two different antennas, but they'll be kick-ass.
Worried about security... (Score:2)
I need to deploy it eventually, but my main concern right now is users hooking up an access point to their PC and using internet connection sharing or some other hack to give access to our network. So far, threat of death is working, but I can't rely on that. (We disabled ICS in AD GPOs but some users have admin rights to their PCs....)
Does 11a or 11g provide any improvements in security? All "advice" I've read about seems useless (like turning off SID advertising, easily gotten around using kismet, for example).
better security? (Score:2)
802.11a downunder? (Score:2)
The reason for this madness is that some satellite is using 5.2 for an uplink. Considering how well regulated the frequency is in most of the countries between here and Japan, I would think it would be a very bad idea to keep a sat on a frequency that lots of people will be using.
Re:802.11a not as good as it sounds (Score:2)
But reduced rate 802.11a is still twice as fast as full rate 802.11b.