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CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
Chapter One It’s a Wireless World
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Objectives Describe how wireless technology is used in daily activities Tell how wireless local area networks are used in applications such as education, business, travel, construction, and other areas Explain the advantages and disadvantages of wireless technology CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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A Day in the Life of a Wireless User: Home
Hotspots: Locations where wireless data services are available Wireless local area network (WLAN): Essentially identical to standard local area network (LAN) Except devices not connected by wires Can increase productivity CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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A Day in the Life of a Wireless User: Car
Bluetooth wireless standard: Enables short range wireless communication Used in many small devices CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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A Day in the Life of a Wireless User: Office
Fixed broadband wireless: Wireless transmissions between immobile devices Typically between office buildings Utilizes small, customized antennas Free space optics (FSO): Alternative to high-speed fiber optic transmissions CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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A Day in the Life of a Wireless User: Field
Handheld devices used to connect to nearest cell tower Cell tower connects to local telephone company Telephone company connects to appropriate resources Such as servers CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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A Day in the Life of a Wireless User: On Site
Radio frequency identification (RFID) tags: “Electronic barcodes” Used to identify items Can be read if anywhere within range of transmitted radio signal Depending on device CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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A Look at Wireless Technologies
Wireless technology woven throughout many aspects of life Useful to get overview of some current technologies in today’s wireless world CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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Wireless Local Area Networks (WLANs)
Wi-Fi (Wireless Fidelity): Based on standard that transmits at up to 11 Mbps Computers on WLAN must have wireless network interface cards (wireless NIC or Wireless adapter) Performs same basic functions as standard NIC, plus more Access point (AP): Transfers signals between wireless NICs Patch cable connects AP to wired LAN or Internet CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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Wireless Local Area Networks (continued)
Figure 1-3: Wireless LAN CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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Wireless Local Area Networks (continued)
Figure 1-4: Home wireless LAN CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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What is a wireless LAN? Wireless LAN (WLAN) - provides all the features and benefits of traditional LAN technologies such as Ethernet and Token Ring, but without the limitations of wires or cables. CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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What is a wireless LAN? WLAN, like a LAN, requires a physical medium to transmit signals. Instead of using UTP, WLANs use: Infrared light (IR) does include an IR specification limitations, easily blocked, no real products (IrDA) Radio frequencies (RFs) Can penetrate ‘most’ office obstructions CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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What is a wireless LAN? More later!
WLANs use the 2.4 GHz and 5-GHz frequency bands. ISM (Industry, Scientific, Medical) license-free (unlicensed) frequency bands. S-Band ISM 802.11b and g: GHz C-Band ISM 802.11a: – GHz CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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Icons – Wireless Devices and Functions
CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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Icons - Buildings CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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Icons – Typical Wired Network Devices
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Icons – Wireless LAN Antenna
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IEEE 802.11 and the Wi-Fi Alliance
IEEE LAN/MAN Standards Committee (LMSC) First standard released in 1997, several since then Wireless Ethernet Compatibility Alliance (WECA) Advertises its Wi-Fi (wireless fidelity) program Any vendor can have its products tested for interoperability Cisco is a founding member CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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Wi-Fi™ Wi-Fi™ Alliance Wi-Fi’s™ Mission WECA changed its name to Wi-Fi
Wireless Fidelity Alliance 170+ members Over 350 products certified Wi-Fi’s™ Mission Certify interoperability of WLAN products (802.11) Wi-Fi™ is the “stamp of approval” Promote Wi-Fi™ as the global standard CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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Other Wireless Technologies
Not discussed in this course: Cellular Bluetooth or PAN (Personal Area Network) 3G (3rd Generation) UWB (Ultra Wide Band) FSO (Free Space Optics) Radio waves off meteor trails! CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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Why Wireless? CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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WLAN Evolution Warehousing Retail Healthcare Education Businesses Home
Radio Network Speed 860 Kbps 900 MHz 1 and 2 Mbps 2.4 GHz Proprietary 1 and 2 Mbps 11 Mbps 54 Mbps Standards-based 2.4 GHz 5 GHz IEEE Begins Drafting Ratified 802.11a,b Ratified 802.11g Drafted 1986 1988 1990 1992 1994 1996 1998 2000 2002
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Current Standards – a, b, g
Radio Network Speed 860 Kbps 900 MHz 1 and 2 Mbps 2.4 GHz Proprietary 1 and 2 Mbps 11 Mbps 54 Mbps Standards-based 2.4 GHz 5 GHz IEEE Begins Drafting Ratified 802.11a,b Ratified 802.11g Ratified 1986 1988 1990 1992 1994 1996 1998 2000 2003 802.11a Up to 54 Mbps 5 GHz Not compatible with either b or g 802.11b Up to 11 Mbps 2.4 GHz 802.11g 802.11g is backwards compatible with b, but with a drawback (later) CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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802.11 PHY (Physical Layer) Technologies
Radio Network Speed 860 Kbps 900 MHz 1 and 2 Mbps 2.4 GHz Proprietary 1 and 2 Mbps 11 Mbps 54 Mbps Standards-based 2.4 GHz 5 GHz IEEE Begins Drafting Ratified 802.11a,b Ratified 802.11g Ratified 1986 1988 1990 1992 1994 1996 1998 2000 2003 Infrared light Three types of radio transmission within the unlicensed 2.4-GHz frequency bands: Frequency hopping spread spectrum (FHSS) b (not used) Direct sequence spread spectrum (DSSS) b Orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing (OFDM) g One type of radio transmission within the unlicensed 5-GHz frequency bands: Orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing (OFDM) a CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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Major Factors There are four major factors to consider before implementing a wireless network: High availability Scalability Manageability Open architecture CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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Atmosphere: the wireless medium
Wireless signals are electromagnetic waves No physical medium is necessary The ability of radio waves to pass through walls and cover great distances makes wireless a versatile way to build a network. CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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Electromagnetic Spectrum
The Electromagnetic Spectrum Chart The waves differ only in their frequency. All of these waves share some very important characteristics. Travel at the speed of light Obey the equation (frequency) x (wavelength) = c (speed of light). Very different interactions with various materials. Low frequency electromagnetic waves have a long wavelength, while high frequency electromagnetic waves have a short wavelength. Wavelength represents the distance from one peak to the next on the sine wave. CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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The Electromagnetic Wave Equation
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The size of a bit “Speed of the link” or “Speed of the network”
Sometimes we forget that the speed of the data always travels near the speed of light: 180,000 miles/second or 300,000 meters/second What changes is the length of the bit. Using the formula: speed of light = frequency x wavelength 1 bps = CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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Distance versus Speed WLANs are only one usage of the radio frequency (RF) spectrum. CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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Bluetooth Low-power wireless data and voice transmission technology
Bluetooth devices communicate via radio modules Link manager: Software that helps identify other Bluetooth devices, creates links between devices, and sends and receives data Transmit data at up to 1 Mbps over 10 meters Bluetooth devices within range of each other automatically connect Master and slave CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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Bluetooth (continued)
Piconet: Bluetooth network containing a master and at least one slave Figure 1-5: Bluetooth device CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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Bluetooth Uses devices with small radio transceivers, called radio modules, built onto microprocessor chips Special software, called a link manager, identifies other Bluetooth devices, creates links with them, and sends and receives data Transmits at up to 1 Mbps over a distance of 33 feet and is not impeded by physical barriers Bluetooth products created by over 1500 computer, telephone, and peripheral vendors CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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Bluetooth Headset The Bluetooth headset automatically establishes a connection with the telephone CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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Piconet Two or more Bluetooth devices that send and receive data make up a personal area network (PAN), also called a piconet Figure 1-3 shows a Bluetooth network Bluetooth was named after the 10th century Danish King Harold Bluetooth, who was responsible for unifying Scandinavia CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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Bluetooth Network CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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Telecommunications Links
Integrated Services Digital Networks (ISDN): Transmits at 256 Kbps T-1 lines: Transmit at Mbps Cable modems: Use television cable connection Digital subscriber lines (DSL): Use telephone lines WiMax: Signal transmitted between antennas Up to 75 Mbps and over up to 35 miles Fixed Broadband CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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Telecommunications Links (continued)
FSO: Transmit at speeds up to 1.25 Gbps over up to 4 miles Line-of-site transmission Figure 1-6: Free space optics transceiver CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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Telecommunications Links (continued)
Figure 1-7: Wireless office technologies CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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2G Digital Cellular Personal Digital Assistant (PDA) Hand-held device
May include a barcode scanner and keyboard, as shown in Figure 1-6 Data may be transmitted to a terminal using wireless digital cellular technology CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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Three Standards The second generation (2G) standard sends data at rates up to 14 thousand bits per second (kilobits per second or Kbps) In the future, the third generation (3G) technology may transmit up to 2 Mbps using a universal standard An interim technology known as 2.5 G offers a bandwidth of up to 384 Kbps CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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Digital Cellular Network
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Cellular Telephony Global Systems for Mobile (GSM) communications technology: Coverage includes most of US and parts of Europe and Japan Transmission speeds up to 9.6 Kbps Information transmitted based on Wireless Application Protocol (WAP) Standard way to transmit, format, and display data for devices like cell phones and handheld devices CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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Cellular Telephony (continued)
Figure 1-8: Browsing the World Wide Web CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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Cellular Telephony (continued)
WAP cell phone runs a microbrowser that uses Wireless Markup Language (WML) instead of HTML WAP gateway or proxy: Translates between WML and HTML Figure 1-9: WAP communications CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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Radio Frequency Identification (RFID)
Like an electronic barcode: Can contain larger amounts of updatable information Information transmitted via radio waves Range typically about 1 foot at 5 Mbps Figure 1-10: RFID tag CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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Fixed Broadband Wireless and Other Alternatives
Integrated Service Digital Networks (ISDN)—consist of leased lines that transmit at 256 Kbps Expensive T-1 lines—transmit at Mbps Cable modems—use television cable connections Digital subscriber lines (DSL)—have limited availability Fixed broadband wireless—a faster less expensive choice CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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Fixed Broadband Wireless
Fixed broadband transmits as far as 35 miles at speeds up to 1 billion bits per second (gigabits or Gbps) for downloads and 512 Kbps for uploads Uses small custom antenna on roof of each connected building Figure 1-11 shows fixed broadband wireless network CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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Fixed Broadband Wireless Network
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Satellite Transmits data to/from satellite circling the earth
A repeater in the satellite simply “repeats” the signal to another location Earth station transmits at one frequency and receives the signal at another frequency Transmission time from one earth station to another is approximately 250 milliseconds See Figure 1-4 CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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Satellite Frequency Transmission
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A Satellite Network CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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Wireless Technology Categories
Table 1-1: Typical wireless technologies CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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Wireless LAN Applications: Education
Educational institutions some of first adopters of WLANs Dramatic advantages in teaching and learning Wireless LAN connections offer students important degree of freedom WLAN technology translates into cost savings for colleges Reduces need for wiring and infrastructure Fewer computer labs necessary CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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Wireless LAN Applications: Education (continued)
Figure 1-11: Campus access point locations CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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Wireless LAN Applications: Business
Wireless LAN technologies have significantly changed how business conducted Meetings not confined to conference rooms Easier to connect to network resources and Internet Can create office in space where traditional infrastructure does not exist CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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Wireless LAN Applications: Travel
Travel industry perhaps adopted wireless technologies more than any other industry Many airport terminals provide wireless hotspots Several large airlines providing wireless capabilities to passengers during flights Some airlines use WLAN technology to communicate with aircraft on ground Some airlines use WLAN technology to facilitate maintenance tasks Some airlines use new wireless data service to send and receive messages CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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Wireless LAN Applications: Construction
Wireless technology has greatly benefited construction industry Better management of resources Better management of paperwork Construction equipment being fitted with wireless terminals “Smart” equipment GPS information can provide location information to within centimeters CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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Wireless LAN Applications: Warehouse Management
New products arrive continuously Must be inventoried and stored Products being shipped must first be located then transferred to correct location and truck Mistakes in inventory or inability to locate items can be devastating Mark inventory with RFID tags Warehouse management system (WMS) software: Can manage all activities from receiving through shipping Utilize wireless technology CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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Wireless LAN Applications: Public Safety
Public safety departments using WLANs and GSM to communicate information with public safety vehicles City-owned buildings equipped with APs Large volumes of data can be quickly downloaded to vehicles e.g., building floor plans, photographs of criminal suspects, and maps CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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Wireless LAN Applications: Healthcare
Wireless LAN point-of-care computer systems allow medical staff to access and update patient records immediately Document patient’s medication administration immediately Extensive use of RFID tags Identify healthcare professionals, patients, medications System verifies that medication being administered to correct patient in correct dosage Eliminates potential errors and documentation inefficiencies CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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Wireless LAN Applications: Healthcare (continued)
Documentation process takes place at bedside where care delivered Improves accuracy Hospital personnel have real-time access to latest medication and patient status information Wireless technology also used in other medical areas: e.g., video pills CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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Wireless LAN Applications: Healthcare (continued)
Figure 1-12: Video pill CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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Wireless Advantages and Disadvantages: Advantages
Mobility: Primary advantage of wireless technology Enables individuals to use devices no matter where users roam within range of network Increasingly mobile workforce is characteristic of today’s business world WLANs give mobile workers freedom while allowing them to access network resources “Flatter” organizations: WLANs give team-based workers ability to access network resources needed while collaborating in team environment CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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Wireless Advantages and Disadvantages: Advantages (continued)
Easier and Less Expensive Installation: Installing network cabling in older buildings difficult and costly Wireless LAN is ideal solution Eliminating need for cabling results in cost savings Significant time savings as well Allows offices to reorganize easily Increased Reliability: Wireless LAN technology eliminates certain types of cable failures and increases overall network reliability CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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Wireless Advantages and Disadvantages: Advantages (continued)
Disaster Recovery: Documented disaster recovery plan vital to every business Hot site: Off-site facility that can run business’s operations if primary site is not available Generally maintained by third party Expensive Cold site: Customer provides and installs equipment Many businesses use cold sites and WLANs as major piece of disaster recovery plan No consideration given to network cabling CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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Wireless Advantages and Disadvantages: Disadvantages
Security: Wireless signals broadcast in open air Security for wireless LANs is prime concern Unauthorized users might access network War driving Attackers might view transmitted data Employees could install rogue access points Attackers could easily crack existing wireless security Older wireless products have very weak security features CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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Wireless Advantages and Disadvantages: Disadvantages (continued)
Radio Signal Interference: Signals from other devices can disrupt wireless transmissions Or wireless device may be source of interference for other devices e.g., Microwave ovens, elevator motors, photocopying machines, theft protection devices, cordless telephones Solution: Locate source of interference and remove Health Risks: Wireless devices emit RF energy Not known if or to what extent low levels of RF might cause adverse health effects CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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Summary Wireless devices and technologies enable users to roam almost anywhere and remain connected to data and voice networks A WLAN, also known as Wi-Fi, functions the same as a standard wired network except devices send radio frequency signals through the air instead of being connected to the network by cabling Bluetooth devices communicate using small radio transceivers called radio modules that are built into microprocessor chips CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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Summary (continued) Two popular technologies are WiMax and free space optics (FSO) Handheld devices can send and receive wireless signals using the Global System for Mobile (GSM) communications technology RFID tags function as electronic barcodes Wireless personal area networks (WPANs) cover technologies where the transmission generally extends only a few meters or feet, whereas wireless local area networks (WLANs) are generally restricted to 112 meters (375 feet) CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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Summary (continued) Wireless LAN applications can be found in industries in which employees need the freedom to conduct business without being confined to a specific location Wireless LANs have significant advantages, including increased mobility, easier and less expensive network installations, increased network reliability, and disaster recovery Some of the disadvantages of wireless LANs include security, radio signal interference, and health concerns CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition
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