Corinex Global ETS 300-826 manual Glossary Wi-Fi Protected Access WPA, Wide Area Network WAN

Models: ETS 300-826 ETS 300-328

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Glossary

Wi-Fi Protected Access (WPA)

The Wi-Fi Alliance put together WPA as a data encryption method for 802.11 wire- less LANs. WPA is an industry-supported, pre-standard version of 802.11i, utilizing the Temporal Key Integrity Protocol (TKIP), which fixes the problems of WEP, in- cluding using dynamic keys.

Wide Area Network (WAN)

A WAN consists of multiple LANs that are tied together via telephone services and/ or fiberoptic cabling. WANs may span a city, a state, a country, or even the world.

Wired Equivalent Privacy (WEP)

Now widely recognized as flawed, WEP is a data encryption method used to protect the transmission between 802.11 wireless clients and APs. However, it uses the same key among all communicating devices. WEP’s problems are well-known, in- cluding an insufficient key length and no automated method for distributing the keys. WEP can be easily cracked in a couple of hours with off-the-shelf tools.

Wireless LAN (WLAN)

A wireless LAN does not use cable to transmit signals, but rather uses radio or infrared to transmit packets through the air. Radio Frequency (RF) and infrared are

commonly used types of wireless transmission. Most wireless LANs use spread 35 spectrum technology. It offers limited bandwidth, usually under 11Mbps, and users share the bandwidth with other devices in the spectrum; however, users can oper-

ate a spread spectrum device without licensing from.

Corinex Wireless G USB Mini Adapter

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Corinex Global ETS 300-826 manual Glossary Wi-Fi Protected Access WPA, Wide Area Network WAN, Wired Equivalent Privacy WEP