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Wireless LAN Protocols
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Wireless Industry Standards & WLAN Management
by AirWave
Published: February 1, 2006  Type: White Paper

This white paper outlines all of the wireless LAN standards, their current state, implications, and a summary of features for each standard.

Wireless Communications Technology Landscape
by Dell
Published: February 1, 2005  Type: White Paper

There are many wireless communications technologies that can be differentiated by frequency, bandwidth, range, and applications. This white paper surveys these technologies.

Protection Ripple in 802.11 WLANs
by CWNP Program
Published: June 4, 2004  Type: White Paper

A whitepaper detailing common problems with using protection mechanisms such as RTS/CTS and CTS-to-Self.

The Effects of Adjacent Channel Rejection and Adjacent Channel Interference on 802.11 WLAN Performance
by Texas Instruments
Published: November 1, 2003  Type: White Paper

The escalating deployment of wireless networking technology as well as other wireless technologies in the same unlicensed spectrum is rapidly increasing the radio frequency (RF) interference for Wi-Fi (802.11) products, threatening the data throughput pe

Netgear 108 Mbps Wireless Solution
by Netgear
Published: October 1, 2003  Type: White Paper

NETGEAR 108 Mbps Super Wireless products are the first to deliver 108 Mbps Super Wireless performances. They offer a superior set of advanced, fully compliant 802.11g and 802.11b features, enhanced speed, range up to four times that of 802.11b, leading-e

WLAN Channel Bonding: Causing Greater Problems Than It Solves
by Texas Instruments
Published: September 1, 2003  Type: White Paper

Several enhancements have been proposed for increasing 802.11 wireless local area network (WLAN) throughput. Some of these, such as increasing the modulation density, improvements to the media access (MAC) layer and techniques like multiple in, multiple

Wireless LAN Software White Paper
by VOCAL Technologies, Ltd.
Published: April 1, 2003  Type: White Paper

Wireless LAN software uses 64 CCK (Complementary Code Keying) chipping sequences to achieve 11 Mbps. Rather than using the Barker code, CCK uses a series of codes called Complementary Sequences. Because there are 64 unique code words that can be used to

Trends in WLAN Technology
by Future Communications Software
Published: December 1, 2002  Type: White Paper

Wireless LANs effectively combine data connectivity with user mobility. Wireless LANs today provide wireless access to vital network resources such as large, multi-location enterprises, small and medium size enterprises as well as hospitals, hotels, airp

Making 802.11g Transmitter Measurements
by Agilent Technologies
Published: November 1, 2002  Type: White Paper

802.11g is the latest standard in wireless computer networking. It follows on the developments of 802.11a and 802.11b, combining the speed of 802.11a with the low cost and installed base of 802.11b devices. The aim of 802.11g - to be interoperable with 8

WLAN RFICs Drive Next-Generation Test Requirements
by Credence Systems
Published: September 1, 2002  Type: White Paper

Evolving consumer demand for flexible, high-bandwidth applications is fueling a race for a new generation of high-performance wireless local-area network (WLAN) products. than seen before in commercial communications products. For semiconductor companies

Use of Asymmetrical Advance coding for 802.11g and 802.11NG
by VOCAL Technologies, Ltd.
Published: September 1, 2002  Type: White Paper

This paper proposes the use of Asymmetrical Advanced Coding Techniques (AACT) for the 802.11g and the 802.11NG. Theses Asymmetrical Advance Coding Techniques have the main purpose of saving power in the mobile device.

Trade-Off Analysis (802.11e versus 802.15.3 QoS Mechanism)
by Xtreme Spectrum
Published: July 1, 2002  Type: White Paper

In recent years, there has been a number of MAC protocols proposed to efficiently handle prioritized and parameterized QoS based traffic. In this paper, we intend to review two of the most popular ones: IEEE 802.11e draft D3.0 versus IEEE 802.15.3 draft

Troubleshooting Common Wireless LAN Radio Problems
by Intersil
Published: June 1, 2002  Type: White Paper

This paper discusses common WLAN transmitter and receiver problems and their solutions. Orderly diagnostic procedures are presented to rapidly zero in on the source of trouble. Tried and proven mitigation techniques are discussed. The paper concentrates

Mono-Phase and Bi-Phase Ultra-Wideband
by Xtreme Spectrum
Published: May 1, 2002  Type: White Paper

In every commercially deployed radio technology, from cellular phones to WiFi (802.11b) to WiFi5(802.11a), the methods employed to create the signal transport, called the modulation technique, arewidespread early on. Themarketplace drives these disparate

Ultra-Wideband: Wireless without Compromise - A Renaissance in the Making
by Xtreme Spectrum
Published: March 1, 2002  Type: White Paper

While wireless network solutions have progressed into the enterprise and public access markets, the home networking market has still not found an appropriate wireless solution. The home market is unique in that it simultaneously requires high data rates,

Autocorrelation - A New Differentiating Domain For Multiple Access Wireless Communications
by AT&T
Published: February 1, 2002  Type: White Paper

In this paper, a new differentiating domain, the autocorrelation of the transmitted signals, is exploited, and a new random multiple access method, based on the principle of Autocorrelation Matching (AM), is developed on top of it. The advantages of havi

The Security Mechanism for IEEE 802.11 Wireless Networks
by SANS Institute
Published: November 1, 2001  Type: White Paper

Wireless Networks is a data communication system that uses shared radio waves or infraded light to transmit and recieve data without wired cables. This paper explains the introduction to Wireless Local Area Networks (WLAN), and the methods employed to se

OSU-MAC: A New, Real-Time Medium Access Control Protocol for Wireless WANs with Asymmetric Wireless Links
by Ohio State University
Published: April 1, 2001  Type: White Paper

Supported under the NSF Special Projects in Communication and Networking, Ohio State University researchers in both the wireless communications and networking areas are working toward achieving significant gains in wireless system performance by leveragi

Frequency Hopping vs. Direct Sequence Spread Spectrum Techniques
by Bazar Electronico
Published: February 1, 2001  Type: White Paper

Spread spectrum technology was first introduced about 50 years ago by the military as a way of sending secure communications. From the beginning it was designed to be resistant to noise, interference, jamming, and unauthorized detection. Spread spectrum

Wi-Fi (IEEE 802.11b) and Bluetooth: Coexistence Issues and Solutions for the 2.4 GHz ISM Band
by Texas Instruments
Published: February 1, 2001  Type: White Paper

This white paper presents information related to the IEEE 802.11b Wireless Local Area Networking standard (Wi-Fi) and the Bluetooth Wireless Personal Area Networking standard. Both Wi-Fi and Bluetooth products utilize the unlicensed 2.4 GHz ISM band. Due