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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 16 page paper considers the 802.11 set of protocols looking at the use of the technology in general as well as 802.11a, 802.11b and 802.11g individually looking at their relative advantages and disadvantages. The paper then considers the dangers of using these in terms of security and where the technology may lead on the future. The bibliography cites 16 sources.
Page Count:
16 pages (~225 words per page)
File: TS14_TE80211g.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
3. BUSINESS DECISIONS ISSUES 10 3.1 Security Problems 10 3.2 Blue Tooth 17 3.3 Other Issues 17 4. FUTURE DEVELOPMENT 18 REFERENCES 20 Abstract This 16
page paper considers the 802.11 set of protocols looking at the use of the technology in general as well as 802.11a, 802.11b and 802.11g individually looking at their relative advantages
and disadvantages. The paper then considers the dangers of using these in terms of security and where the technology may lead on the future. The bibliography cites 16 sources.
Executive Summary The set of 802.11 protocols have been developed to set q single standard for Wi-Fi transmissions. The version a, b and g all have different
strengths and weaknesses, 802.11a can support a large number of channels, but is weaker, whereas 802.11b and 802.11g is stronger but can support fewer channels and is also more prone
to suffer and cause interference due to its use of the 2.4 GHz. There are development but all the systems also suffer from weaknesses regarding considerations of security and the
way in which they operate. 1. Introduction The development of wireless networking and local area networks (LAN) has necessitated the development of uniform standards to ensure different systems can
be integrated and the wireless devices are not incompatible. IEEE developed the 802 set of standards to unify mobile technology, 80.211 have been the protocols for what has become colloquially
known as WiFi (Brenner, 1996). 802.11 variants have a cellular architecture, each of the cells is called a Basic Service Set (BSS) which will be controlled by a base
station, which is known as an access point (AP) (Brenner, 1996). These form the wireless LAN, which, in theory may be made up on only a single BSS and a
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