Understanding your

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Wireless Network

 

Wireless local area networks (WLAN) perform the exact same functions as wired local area networks (LAN). Each computer in the WLAN uses a data radio device to connect to the network, where all computers in the network share the same frequen- cy and method for identifying wireless devices. Wireless local area networks differ from wired Local area networks only in their operating mode. The two operation modes are AdHoc Mode and Infrastructure Mode.

What is Adhoc Mode?

Adhoc mode is a networking framework by which wireless devices or stations communicate directly with each other, without the need for an access point (AP).

Ad-hoc mode can be referred to as peer-to-peer mode or an Independent Basic Service Set (IBSS). This Mode is useful when you want to communicate among many computers locally without the need to connect to printers or file servers on a wired LAN.

Figure 3. AdHoc Network

Understanding your Wireless Network 5

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Actiontec electronic HWE05490-01 user manual Understanding your Wireless Network, What is Adhoc Mode?