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IEEE 802.11 handbook : : a designer's companion / Bob O'Hara, Al Petrick.

By: O'Hara, Bob, 1956-.
Contributor(s): Petrick, Al, 1957- | IEEE Xplore (Online Service) [distributor.].
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookSeries: IEEE standards wireless networks series: Publisher: New York, NY : IEEE, c2005Distributor: [Piscataqay, New Jersey] : IEEE Xplore, [2005]Edition: 2nd ed.Description: 1 PDF (xxxvi, 364 pages) : illustrations.Content type: text Media type: electronic Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9781118098851.Genre/Form: Electronic books.Online resources: Abstract with links to resource
Contents:
Introduction. -- Acronyms and Abbreviations. <p>Chapter 1 Similarities and differences between wireless and wired local area networks (LANs). -- Chapter&#160;2 IEEE 802.11: First International Standard for WLANs. -- Chapter 3 Medium Access Control (MAC). -- Chapter 4 IEEE 802.11i Security Enhancements. -- Chapter 5 IEEE P802.11e Quality of Service (QoS) Enhancements. -- Chapter 6 IEEE 802.11h Dynamic Frequency Selection (DFS) and Transmit Power Control (TPC). -- Chapter 7 IEEE 802.11d International Operation. -- Chapter 8 IEEE 802.11F Inter Access Point Protocol (IAPP). -- Chapter 9 MAC Management. -- Chapter 10 MAC Management Information Base (MIB). -- Chapter 11 The Physical Layer (PHY). -- Chapter 12 PHY Extensions to IEEE 802.11. -- Chapter 13 IEEE 802.11j Operation in Japan at 4.9GHz and 5 GHz. -- Chapter 14 IEEE 802.11g Higher Data Rates in 2.4 GHz Frequency Band. -- Chapter 15 IEEE 802.11n Higher Data Rates beyond 54Mbit/s. -- Chapter 16 System Design Considerations for IEEE 802.11 LANs. -- Glossary. -- Index.
Summary: The first generation 802.11 wireless market, once struggling to expand, has spread from largely vertical applications such as healthcare, point of sale, and inventory management to become much more broad as a general networking technology being deployed in offices, schools, hotel guest rooms, airport departure areas, airplane cabins, entertainment venues, coffee shops, restaurants, and homes. This has led to the tremendous growth of new sources of IEEE 802.11 devices. IEEE 802.11 equipment is now moving into its second stage, where the wireless LAN is being treated as a large wireless communication system. As a system, there is more to consider than simply the communication over the air between a single access point and the associated mobile devices. This has lead to innovative changes in the equipment that makes up a wireless LAN. The IEEE 802.11 Handbook: A Designer's Companion, Second Edition is for the system network architects, hardware engineers and software engineers at the heart of this second stage in the evolution of 802.11 wireless LANs and for those designers that will take 802.11 to the next stage.
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Includes bibliographical references.phiques.

Introduction. -- Acronyms and Abbreviations. <p>Chapter 1 Similarities and differences between wireless and wired local area networks (LANs). -- Chapter&#160;2 IEEE 802.11: First International Standard for WLANs. -- Chapter 3 Medium Access Control (MAC). -- Chapter 4 IEEE 802.11i Security Enhancements. -- Chapter 5 IEEE P802.11e Quality of Service (QoS) Enhancements. -- Chapter 6 IEEE 802.11h Dynamic Frequency Selection (DFS) and Transmit Power Control (TPC). -- Chapter 7 IEEE 802.11d International Operation. -- Chapter 8 IEEE 802.11F Inter Access Point Protocol (IAPP). -- Chapter 9 MAC Management. -- Chapter 10 MAC Management Information Base (MIB). -- Chapter 11 The Physical Layer (PHY). -- Chapter 12 PHY Extensions to IEEE 802.11. -- Chapter 13 IEEE 802.11j Operation in Japan at 4.9GHz and 5 GHz. -- Chapter 14 IEEE 802.11g Higher Data Rates in 2.4 GHz Frequency Band. -- Chapter 15 IEEE 802.11n Higher Data Rates beyond 54Mbit/s. -- Chapter 16 System Design Considerations for IEEE 802.11 LANs. -- Glossary. -- Index.

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The first generation 802.11 wireless market, once struggling to expand, has spread from largely vertical applications such as healthcare, point of sale, and inventory management to become much more broad as a general networking technology being deployed in offices, schools, hotel guest rooms, airport departure areas, airplane cabins, entertainment venues, coffee shops, restaurants, and homes. This has led to the tremendous growth of new sources of IEEE 802.11 devices. IEEE 802.11 equipment is now moving into its second stage, where the wireless LAN is being treated as a large wireless communication system. As a system, there is more to consider than simply the communication over the air between a single access point and the associated mobile devices. This has lead to innovative changes in the equipment that makes up a wireless LAN. The IEEE 802.11 Handbook: A Designer's Companion, Second Edition is for the system network architects, hardware engineers and software engineers at the heart of this second stage in the evolution of 802.11 wireless LANs and for those designers that will take 802.11 to the next stage.

Mode of access: World Wide Web

Description based on PDF viewed 01/12/2017.

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