Wireless Terminology

Wireless Standards

802.11, 802.11b and 802.11g all refer to a series of standards which govern a common method of creating wireless local area networks (WLANs).

802.11b and 11g are the most common WLAN types, with 11g being the later and faster of the two standards with a maximum transmission rate of 54Mbps.

The NP642 is faster again as it is built around a processor which ‘turbo-charges’ transmission rates up to 108Mbps.

802.11g is ‘backward compatible’ with 802.11b, which means that the two standards are able to communicate, albeit at the lower 11Mbps rate of the 11b standard.

The NP642 can communicate with both kinds of device at their maximum rate, and with other ‘turbo-charged’ devices at the much higher rate of 108Mbps.

Wireless Security Terms

The Advanced Features of the NP642 include the ability to select from several types of Wireless Security.

WEP

WEP stands for Wired Equivalent Privacy. Introduced

 

with 802.11b, WEP uses encryption to protect data

 

confidentiality by way of pre-shared keys (passwords or

 

pass-phrases) that are entered at both ends. Superseded by

 

WPA and 802.11i but still in use.

NP642 IEEE 802.11g PCI Adapter

5

YML785 Rev1

 

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NetComm NP642 manual Wireless Terminology, Wireless Standards