Wireless Standards
• Wireless networking (802.11) • Managed by the IEEE LAN/MAN Standards Committee (IEEE 802) • Many updates over time • Check with IEEE for the latest • The Wi-Fi trademark • Wi-Fi Alliance handles interoperability testing
802.11a
One of the original 802.11 wireless standards • October 1999 • Operates in the 5 GHz range • 54 megabits per second (Mbit/s) • Smaller range than 802.11b • Higher frequency is absorbed by objects in the way • Many rules-of-thumb calculate 1/3rd the range of 802.11b or 802.11g
802.11g
An “upgrade” to 802.11b - June 2003
• Operates in the 2.4 GHz range
• 54 megabits per second (Mbit/s)
• Same as 802.11a (but a little bit less throughput)
• Backwards-compatible with 802.11b
• Same frequency conflict problems as 802.11b
802.11b
• Also an original 802.11 standard - October 1999 • Operates in the 2.4 GHz range • 11 megabits per second (Mbit/s) • Better range than 802.11a • Less absorption problems • More frequency conflict • Baby monitors, cordless phones, microwave ovens, Bluetooth
802.11n
802.11ac
Approved in January 2014 • Significant improvements over 802.11n • Operates in the 5 GHz band • Less crowded, more frequencies (up to 160 MHz channel bandwidth) • Increased channel bonding - Larger bandwidth usage • Denser signaling modulation - Faster data transfers • Eight MU-MIMO streams • Twice as many streams as 802.11n • Nearly 7 gigabits per second