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USB1500 Wireless PC LAN Adapter
4.6 MORE ON AD-HOC AND AP MODES
Ad-Hoc Mode (Peer-to-Peer Workgroup)
The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) standard for wireless LAN’s (WLAN’s),
802.11offers two methods for confi guring a wireless network —
•Set all stations to connect in
•Set all stations to use the same network name (or SSID).
•Set all stations to use the same wireless channel for communication.
•Set all stations to either disable the WEP encryption key, or set all stations to use an identical WEP encryption key.
AP Mode (Infrastructure Mode)
With a wireless Access Point (AP), you can put the
fixed range or area of coverage, interacting with a wireless node by way of an antenna. In AP Mode, the wireless Access Point converts airwave data into wired Ethernet data, acting as a bridge between the wired LAN and wireless clients. Connecting multiple Access Points via a wired Ethernet backbone can further extend the wireless network coverage. As a mobile computing device moves out of the range of one Access Point, it moves into the range of another. As a result, wireless clients can freely roam from one Access Point domain to another and still maintain seamless network connection. To set up an AP network operating with standard protocols, do the following:
•Set all wireless stations to connect in AP mode.
•Set all stations to use the same network name (or SSID).
•Set all wireless Access Points to use the same network name (or ESSID).
•Set all stations to disable the WEP encryption key, or set all stations to use an identical WEP encryption key as used by the Access Point.
•Set up wireless channels used by individual Access Points. (It is not necessary to set channels on the stations as the stations will automatically scan through all channels for the nearest Access Point.
•You should consult your access point documentation for the available options.