Belkin F506230-3 user manual Wireless Networking Using 802.11b, Ad-Hoc Peer-to-Peer Network

Models: F506230-3

1 71
Download 71 pages 63.73 Kb
Page 57
Image 57
Wireless Networking Using 802.11b

Wireless Networking Using 802.11b

To form a wireless network, two basic components are used. The first is a wireless adapter for a PC. This can be either a USB wireless adapter or a PCMCIA adapter. The adapter gives the PC wireless Ethernet capabilities. The second is a Wireless Access Point, which A can connect to a wired LAN and allow the wireless PC’s to be able to access the wired LAN. A Wireless Access Point can be a stand alone component or it can be embedded into a Cable/DSL router, thus forming a wireless Gateway/Router. The uses of each of these types of products is outlined later in this article.

Wireless networking is very similar to wired networking, except for a few basic concepts that one must grasp. There are two different ways to network computers using 802.11b. The first, and least used method is the Ad-Hoc method, also known as Peer-to-Peer. The more commonly used method is called Infrastructure Mode.

Ad-Hoc (Peer-to-Peer) Network

Ad-Hoc or Peer-to-Peer refers to a wireless configuration in which each computer communicates directly with another. An Ad-Hoc wireless LAN consists of a group of computers, each equipped with a wireless adapter, connected directly via radio signals to form an independent wireless LAN. Computers in a specific Ad-Hoc wireless LAN must be configured to the same radio channel to communicate with one another. More than one Ad-Hoc network can exist in the same space if it is configured to operate on a different channel. There are a varying number of channels depending on which the part of the world you are operating in. The US has 11 channels, Europe has 13 channels and Japan has 14 channels. The following diagram shows a typical Ad-Hoc wireless LAN configuration.

56

Page 57
Image 57
Belkin F506230-3 user manual Wireless Networking Using 802.11b, Ad-Hoc Peer-to-Peer Network