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Wireless LAN 
Overview
A wireless LAN (WLAN) is typically an extension
of a wired LAN. WLAN components convert data packets into radio
waves or infrared (IR) light pulses and send them to other wireless
devices or to an access point that serves as a gateway to the wired
LAN. Most WLANs today are based on the IEEE 802.11 and 802.11b
standards for wireless communication between devices and a LAN.
These standards permit data transmissions at 1 to 2 Mbps or 5 to 11
Mbps, respectively, and specify a common architecture, transmission
methods, and other aspects of wireless data transfer to improve
interoperability among products.
Technology
Manufacturers of wireless LANs have a range of
technologies to choose from when designing a wireless LAN solution.
Each technology comes with its own set of advantages and
limitations.
Narrowband Technology
A narrowband radio system transmits and receives user information on
a specific radio frequency. Narrowband radio keeps the radio signal
frequency as narrow as possible just to pass the information.
Undesirable crosstalk between communications channels is avoided by
carefully coordinating different users on different channel
frequencies.
A private telephone line is much like a radio frequency. When each
home in a neighborhood has its own private telephone line, people in
one home cannot listen to calls made to other homes. In a radio
system, privacy and noninterference are accomplished by the use of
separate radio frequencies. The radio receiver filters out all radio
signals except the ones on its designated frequency.
From a customer standpoint, one drawback of narrowband technology is
that the end-user must obtain an FCC license for each site where it
is employed.
Spread Spectrum Technology
Most
wireless LAN systems use spread-spectrum technology, a wideband
radio frequency technique developed by the military for use in
reliable, secure, mission-critical communications systems.
Spread-spectrum is designed to trade off bandwidth efficiency for
reliability, integrity, and security. In other words, more bandwidth
is consumed than in the case of narrowband transmission, but the
tradeoff produces a signal that is, in effect, louder and thus
easier to detect, provided that the receiver knows the parameters of
the spread-spectrum signal being broadcast. If a receiver is not
tuned to the right frequency, a spread-spectrum signal looks like
background noise. There are two types of spread spectrum radio:
frequency hopping and direct sequence.
Frequency-Hopping Spread Spectrum Technology
Frequency-hopping spread-spectrum (FHSS) uses a narrowband carrier
that changes frequency in a pattern known to both transmitter and
receiver. Properly synchronized, the net effect is to maintain a
single logical channel. To an unintended receiver, FHSS appears to
be short-duration impulse noise.
Direct-Sequence Spread Spectrum Technology
Direct-sequence spread-spectrum (DSSS) generates a redundant bit
pattern for each bit to be transmitted. This bit pattern is called a
chip (or chipping code). The longer the chip, the greater the
probability that the original data can be recovered (and, of course,
the more bandwidth required). Even if one or more bits in the chip
are damaged during transmission, statistical techniques embedded in
the radio can recover the original data without the need for
retransmission. To an unintended receiver, DSSS appears as low-power
wideband noise and is rejected (ignored) by most narrowband
receivers.
Infrared Technology
A third technology, little used in commercial wireless LANs, is
infrared. Infrared (IR) systems use very high frequencies, just
below visible light in the electromagnetic spectrum, to carry data.
Like light, IR cannot penetrate opaque objects; it is either
directed (line-of-sight) or diffuse technology. Inexpensive directed
systems provide very limited range (3 ft) and typically are used for
personal area networks but occasionally are used in specific
wireless LAN applications. High performance directed IR is
impractical for mobile users and is therefore used only to implement
fixed sub-networks. Diffuse (or reflective) IR wireless LAN systems
do not require line-of-sight, but cells are limited to individual
rooms.
How Wireless LANs Work
Wireless LANs use electromagnetic airwaves (radio
or infrared) to communicate information from one point to another
without relying on any physical connection. Radio waves are often
referred to as radio carriers because they simply perform the
function of delivering energy to a remote receiver. The data being
transmitted is superimposed on the radio carrier so that it can be
accurately extracted at the receiving end. This is generally
referred to as modulation of the carrier by the information being
transmitted. Once data is superimposed (modulated) onto the radio
carrier, the radio signal occupies more than a single frequency,
since the frequency or bit rate of the modulating information adds
to the carrier.

Multiple radio carriers can exist in the same space at the same time
without interfering with each other if the radio waves are
transmitted on different radio frequencies. To extract data, a radio
receiver tunes in one radio frequency while rejecting all other
frequencies.
In a typical wireless LAN configuration, a transmitter/receiver
(transceiver) device, called an access point, connects to the wired
network from a fixed location using standard cabling. At a minimum,
the access point receives, buffers, and transmits data between the
wireless LAN and the wired network infrastructure. A single access
point can support a small group of users and can function within a
range of less than one hundred to several hundred feet. The access
point (or the antenna attached to the access point) is usually
mounted high but may be mounted essentially anywhere that is
practical as long as the desired radio coverage is obtained.
End users access the wireless LAN through wireless-LAN adapters,
which are implemented as PC cards in notebook or palmtop computers,
as cards in desktop computers, or integrated within hand-held
computers. wireless LAN adapters provide an interface between the
client network operating system (NOS) and the airwaves via an
antenna. The nature of the wireless connection is transparent to the
NOS.


Wireless LAN
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