Harmony House 802.11a manual Power Saving Mode, 2X Mode, Roaming

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Configuration Parameters

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Power Saving Mode

The Harmony 802.11a network adapters support optional power management to conserve battery life. Power Saving Mode is only available if the adapter is operating in Infrastructure mode.

When Power Saving Mode is set to Normal or Maximum, a Harmony 802.11a network adapter enters a “doze” mode where the card becomes inactive and only wakes up periodically to receive control messages from the Access Point. The card wakes up more often in Normal mode than in Maximum mode so a card in Normal mode will respond sooner to network requests than a node in Maximum mode. However, Maximum mode draws less power than Normal mode.

When an Access Point receives a packet destined for a dozing client, it buffers the packet and includes a notification within its control message to alert the client that a packet is waiting for it. Once the card receives the control message, it polls the Access Point to request that the buffered packet be sent to it.

2X Mode

The Harmony 802.11a network adapters support 2XTM mode, a high-speed operating mode that can provide data rates of up to 108 Mbps, twice the speed of standard 802.11a devices. By default, 2X mode is disabled.

Note: Products sold in Europe, Japan, and Singapore do not support 2X mode. When 2X mode is disabled, a Harmony 802.11a adapter complies with the IEEE 802.11a standard, can operate on one of eight Channels, and can achieve speeds of up to 54 Mbps.

When 2X mode is enabled, a Harmony 802.11a adapter does not comply with the IEEE 802.11a standard, can operate on one of three Channels, and can achieve speeds of up to 108 Mbps.

Note: You must configure all devices in the same network to use 2X mode. A device in 2X mode cannot communicate with a device in 802.11a mode.

Roaming

The Roaming parameter allows you to determine how tolerant a Harmony 802.11a adapter is to radio phenomena that can cause the unit to roam from one Access Point to another in order to maintain a strong wireless connection.

In areas with many 802.11a Access Points that provide heavy overlapping coverage, set this parameter to Fast to maintain high throughput for each wireless adapter. In most networks, set Roaming to Normal. Wireless adapter throughput will not change noticeably, and an overabundance of Access Points is not required.

If the coverage area provided by 802.11a Access Points is sparse, set Roaming to Slow. Harmony adapters will not roam until they are nearly out of range of the Access Point with which they are associated.

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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 Harmony 8150 802.11a PCI Card Product PackageHarmony 8450 802.11a CardBus Card System Requirements Overview of Country-Specific Features Pre-installation Considerations InstallationRegulatory Warnings FCC GuidelinesIndustry 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 ModeRoaming Power Saving Mode2X Mode For United States and Canada ChannelFor Europe For JapanFor Singapore Send RateFragmentation 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 Common Installation Problems TroubleshootingHow to Obtain Help with Your LAN Installation Adapter Inserted Before Running the Installation Program Windows 98/ME/2000/XP TroubleshootingAdapter Not Listed in Device Manager 802.11a Network Adapter Not Installed ProperlyWindows ME/98 SE Configuring Networking Clients and ProtocolsWindows XP/2000 Windows NT Uninstalling a Harmony 802.11a Network AdapterWindows 98/ME computers RangeWindows NT computers Windows 2000 computersCardBus Card LED Indicators Common Technical Support Questions Logon Access Point is out of range box and clickPassword so the Harmony logon Technical Specifications Technical SpecificationsGeneral Network InformationPhysical RadioEnvironmental Ssid ParametersTechnical Support and Training Appendix BIndex Infrastructure Network Mode Ssid Throughput Topologies