Harmony House manual Configuration Parameters, Ieee 802.11a Specification

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Chapter 4

Configuration Parameters

This chapter provides information on the 802.11a wireless standard and describes the Harmony 802.11a configuration parameters.

The IEEE 802.11a Specification

In 1997, the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) adopted the 802.11 standard for wireless devices operating in the 2.4 GHz frequency band. This standard includes provisions for three radio technologies: direct sequence spread spectrum, frequency hopping spread spectrum, and infrared. Devices that comply with the 802.11 standard operate at a data rate of either 1 or 2 Mbps.

In 1999, the IEEE modified the 802.11 standard to support devices operating in the

5 GHz frequency band, calling this new standard “802.11a.” 802.11a devices are not backwards compatible with 2.4 GHz 802.11 or 802.11b devices. 802.11a radios use a radio technology called Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing (OFDM) to achieve data rates of up to 54 Mbps.

In addition, the Harmony 802.11a network adapters support 2XTM Mode. This mode is not part of the IEEE 802.11a specification but it allows data rates of up to 108 Mbps. See “2X Mode” on page 29 for details. 2X Mode is not available in all countries.

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Contents Users Guide Harmony 802.11a Network AdapterFCC Warning That the following harmonized standards have been applied Declaration of ConformityFor Indoor Use Only Table of Contents Index Introduction ChapterHarmony Family Product Package Harmony 8450 802.11a CardBus CardHarmony 8150 802.11a PCI Card System Requirements Overview of Country-Specific Features FCC Guidelines InstallationPre-installation Considerations Regulatory WarningsIndustry Canada Guidelines Windows ME and Windows 98 SE Installation CD Requirement802.11a CardBus Card Windows NT Laptops Require a Plug-and-Play UtilityWindows 98SE/ME/2000/XP Installation InstructionsPage Page Windows NT Page Harmony 802.11a PCI Card users Follow these steps Related Topics Upgrading to Version Ad Hoc Wireless TopologiesInfrastructure Connecting to a Single APRoaming Roaming Between Multiple APsGuidelines for Roaming Ieee 802.11a Specification Configuration Parameters802.11a Software Parameters Network ModePower Saving Mode 2X ModeRoaming For Japan ChannelFor United States and Canada For EuropeSend Rate FragmentationFor Singapore Security Options WEP Encryption and AuthenticationWEP Keys Harmony Security ProtocolHarmony Security Protocol Guidelines 802.1xConfiguration Parameters Status Monitor Icon Harmony UtilityAssociation Information Configuration UtilityHarmony Utility Station Configuration Harmony Utility Harmony Utility Security WEP for Authentication and EncryptionPage Read Key File Format Harmony Security Protocol Page Page Page 802.1x Click the Wireless Networks tab Click the Authentication tabNetwork Traffic Statistics Send Receive 802.11a Networks Snoop Tool Packet Transmission Success Rate Version Information Troubleshooting How to Obtain Help with Your LAN InstallationCommon Installation Problems Adapter Inserted Before Running the Installation Program Windows 98/ME/2000/XP TroubleshootingAdapter Not Listed in Device Manager 802.11a Network Adapter Not Installed ProperlyConfiguring Networking Clients and Protocols Windows XP/2000Windows ME/98 SE Windows NT Uninstalling a Harmony 802.11a Network AdapterWindows 2000 computers RangeWindows 98/ME computers Windows NT computersCardBus Card LED Indicators Common Technical Support Questions Logon Access Point is out of range box and clickPassword so the Harmony logon Network Information Technical SpecificationsTechnical Specifications GeneralRadio EnvironmentalPhysical Ssid ParametersTechnical Support and Training Appendix BIndex Infrastructure Network Mode Ssid Throughput Topologies