Search
Recommended Sites
Related Links






   

Informative Articles

Antennas Of The New Age
Antennas have been around for a long time. Before the birth of cable television, homes would need it to just to get a signal. The person would need to put this on the roof and adjust it from time to time to get better reception. Satellite...

Defacto Wireless Distribution, LLC Announces the New AirMatrix High Power Outdoor CPE Featuring Router Functionality and AirMatrixOS Client Software.
The AirMatrix Home 14 HP is the perfect CPE solution. By utilizing Pacific Wireless's 14 dBi low profile Rootenna and the router functionality of AirMatrixOS software, AirMatrix has created a rock solid 250 mW CPE that delivers higher...

Get Connected To Wi-Fi
Wi-Fi, short for wireless fidelity refers to a set of wireless networking technologies more specifically referred to as any type of 802.11 network, 802.11b and 802.11a, dual band. The word Wi-Fi was built by an organization called the Wi-Fi...

How to Humanize the Sales Experience
Q. Sometimes when I'm presenting to clients, I sense that the customer tunes out. Is there a better way to communicate with a customer or engage them? A. Salespeople get caught up in the hype of their own product and lose touch with their client's...

Student Recruitment
Picture this scene. It's a warm spring afternoon on the campus of an urban, Northeastern university. Frisbees are soaring through the cloudless sky. Music fills the air while dozens of students enjoy the day; some sunning, some playing, some...

 
WiFi Range: What are the Limits?

Because of the fact that the WiFi networking standard uses very high frequency (2.4 GHz) radio signals to transmit data, its access range is usually quite limited. How limited, of course, depends on the type of WiFi hardware being used.

A single family home or small office, for example, could easily be covered by a single access point, but larger WiFi locations, such as universities and corporate headquarters often need a criss-cross of several different access points in order to serve the entire area.

In theory, this method of adding multiple access points can be expanded limitlessly, to the point of creating citywide blanket network. Such networks have been built, or are being built, in several major American cities.

Creating wide-area wireless broadband networks can lead to numerous advantages, including more mobility for users of WiFi laptops, WiFi phones, and WiFi PDAs.

About the author:

Jeremy Maddock is the webmaster of TeleClick.ca, a trusted source of telecommunications news.

Sign up for PayPal and start accepting credit card payments instantly.