How do IEEE 802.11 and Bluetooth solve the hidden terminal problem?
Q. How do IEEE 802.11 and Bluetooth solve the hidden terminal problem? What is the full name of the IEEE 802.11g specification?
Asked by Tin - Tue Nov 28 12:29:12 2006 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. wireless device use collision avoidance to solve the hidden terminal problem. Basically the sending station needs an ACK msg from the receive station before they can send the data, the ACK is broadcast from the receiving station so the neighbour know that the transmitting station is sending so they wouldn't be sending at that time. 802.11g is the wireless standard that combines both 802.11a and b, sending 54Mbps and can opearate at 2.4GHz range
Answered by Sora Aoi - Tue Nov 28 18:29:45 2006
Q. How do IEEE 802.11 and Bluetooth solve the hidden terminal problem? What is the full name of the IEEE 802.11g specification?
Asked by Tin - Tue Nov 28 12:29:12 2006 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. wireless device use collision avoidance to solve the hidden terminal problem. Basically the sending station needs an ACK msg from the receive station before they can send the data, the ACK is broadcast from the receiving station so the neighbour know that the transmitting station is sending so they wouldn't be sending at that time. 802.11g is the wireless standard that combines both 802.11a and b, sending 54Mbps and can opearate at 2.4GHz range
Answered by Sora Aoi - Tue Nov 28 18:29:45 2006
How does the IEEE 802. 11 Wireless LAN Standard compare with Bluetooth systems?
Q. What are their similarities and differences? How and where are they being used? Thanks! :)
Asked by yendys natsirhc - Sun Mar 30 07:21:48 2008 - - 3 Answers - 0 Comments
A.
Answered by George - Sun Mar 30 07:26:20 2008
Q. What are their similarities and differences? How and where are they being used? Thanks! :)
Asked by yendys natsirhc - Sun Mar 30 07:21:48 2008 - - 3 Answers - 0 Comments
A.
Answered by George - Sun Mar 30 07:26:20 2008
IEEE 802.11 PCI adapter?
Q. Hi, My laptop (HP Pavilion) comes with LAN Express IEEE 802.11 PCI adapter. I want to buy a router and have been trying to find the appropriate one for my wireless hardware. Most of the routers I find, say that they support 802.11a/b/g networks.. Will these work for my hardware? If not, which router can I buy which will work for my laptop? I was trying to use my friend's linksys router ( don't know other specifications of this router), but I was not able to install it on my laptop. It says computer hardware does not support it.. So I will have to buy a router that is compatible with the hardware that I have. Thanks much.
Asked by karthik s - Thu Oct 30 17:37:09 2008 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
A. What is "It", what generates that error or what were you trying to do? What is "Install"? All 802.11 Devices will throttle down to support a given device exept for a type A which can't throttle down because it is the lowest. Routers are not installed they route (could you imagine having to install all the routers on the entire internet. There is something else going on we just need to figure out where to look.
Answered by Kristjan d - Fri Oct 31 22:50:55 2008
Q. Hi, My laptop (HP Pavilion) comes with LAN Express IEEE 802.11 PCI adapter. I want to buy a router and have been trying to find the appropriate one for my wireless hardware. Most of the routers I find, say that they support 802.11a/b/g networks.. Will these work for my hardware? If not, which router can I buy which will work for my laptop? I was trying to use my friend's linksys router ( don't know other specifications of this router), but I was not able to install it on my laptop. It says computer hardware does not support it.. So I will have to buy a router that is compatible with the hardware that I have. Thanks much.
Asked by karthik s - Thu Oct 30 17:37:09 2008 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
A. What is "It", what generates that error or what were you trying to do? What is "Install"? All 802.11 Devices will throttle down to support a given device exept for a type A which can't throttle down because it is the lowest. Routers are not installed they route (could you imagine having to install all the routers on the entire internet. There is something else going on we just need to figure out where to look.
Answered by Kristjan d - Fri Oct 31 22:50:55 2008
What is the difference between IEEE 802.11 vs. HiperLAN2 technologies?
Q. What is the difference between IEEE 802.11 vs. HiperLAN2 technologies?
Asked by checkthisout_alrightyall - Tue Oct 24 14:44:33 2006 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Technical answers: IEEE 802.11, the Wi-Fi standard, denotes a set of Wireless LAN/WLAN standards developed by working group 11 of the IEEE LAN/MAN Standards Committee (IEEE 802). The term 802.11x is also used to denote this set of standards and is not to be mistaken for any one of its elements. There is no single 802.11x standard. The term IEEE 802.11 is also used to refer to the original 802.11, which is now sometimes called "802.11legacy." For the application of these standards see Wi-Fi. hiperlan (HIgh PErformance Radio LAN) is a Wireless LAN standard. It is a European alternative for the IEEE 802.11 standards (the IEEE is an American organization). It is defined by the European Telecommunications Standards Institute (ETSI). In ETSI… [cont.]
Answered by albert - Fri Oct 27 03:26:28 2006
Q. What is the difference between IEEE 802.11 vs. HiperLAN2 technologies?
Asked by checkthisout_alrightyall - Tue Oct 24 14:44:33 2006 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Technical answers: IEEE 802.11, the Wi-Fi standard, denotes a set of Wireless LAN/WLAN standards developed by working group 11 of the IEEE LAN/MAN Standards Committee (IEEE 802). The term 802.11x is also used to denote this set of standards and is not to be mistaken for any one of its elements. There is no single 802.11x standard. The term IEEE 802.11 is also used to refer to the original 802.11, which is now sometimes called "802.11legacy." For the application of these standards see Wi-Fi. hiperlan (HIgh PErformance Radio LAN) is a Wireless LAN standard. It is a European alternative for the IEEE 802.11 standards (the IEEE is an American organization). It is defined by the European Telecommunications Standards Institute (ETSI). In ETSI… [cont.]
Answered by albert - Fri Oct 27 03:26:28 2006
Does temperature have any effect on wireless network speed (IEEE 802.11 a/b/g/n)?
Q. Transmission rate seems to slow down with high temperature? Are there any link to studies or known explanations for this observation?
Asked by kenshin_kudo - Sat Nov 3 06:58:52 2007 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Temperature doesn't but humidity will affect attenuation. If the transmitter and receiver are far apart you might see this. In most places, absolute humidity goes up with temperature (not to be confused with relative humidity, which quite often goes down with temperature).
Answered by mis42n - Sat Nov 3 07:17:01 2007
Q. Transmission rate seems to slow down with high temperature? Are there any link to studies or known explanations for this observation?
Asked by kenshin_kudo - Sat Nov 3 06:58:52 2007 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Temperature doesn't but humidity will affect attenuation. If the transmitter and receiver are far apart you might see this. In most places, absolute humidity goes up with temperature (not to be confused with relative humidity, which quite often goes down with temperature).
Answered by mis42n - Sat Nov 3 07:17:01 2007
explain the IEEE 802.11 wireless networking system and the similarities and differences among the 802.11a?
Q. 802.11b ,802.11g, 802.11n ,systems
Asked by annon - Mon Jul 27 00:32:07 2009 - - 3 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Oh my...lets see how we can explain this simply... IEEE is a professional organization for electrical engineers, computer scientists, ans such and so forth. A major role they have is standardizing technologies. 802.11 is the IEEE wireless standardizations, one of many 802 standards addressing networking (802.3, for example, is the Ethernet standard). The a, b, g, and n are revisions to the standards. First, you have to know that there are two primary frequencies in wireless communications - 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz. 2.4 generally has better range, but many wireless and cordless devices use the 2.4 GHz range...in fact, most older cordless phones use this range, and can hamper wi-fi. 5 GHz is a less used frequency, but, theoretically, has… [cont.]
Answered by bikewrencher - Mon Jul 27 00:54:29 2009
Q. 802.11b ,802.11g, 802.11n ,systems
Asked by annon - Mon Jul 27 00:32:07 2009 - - 3 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Oh my...lets see how we can explain this simply... IEEE is a professional organization for electrical engineers, computer scientists, ans such and so forth. A major role they have is standardizing technologies. 802.11 is the IEEE wireless standardizations, one of many 802 standards addressing networking (802.3, for example, is the Ethernet standard). The a, b, g, and n are revisions to the standards. First, you have to know that there are two primary frequencies in wireless communications - 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz. 2.4 generally has better range, but many wireless and cordless devices use the 2.4 GHz range...in fact, most older cordless phones use this range, and can hamper wi-fi. 5 GHz is a less used frequency, but, theoretically, has… [cont.]
Answered by bikewrencher - Mon Jul 27 00:54:29 2009
how is the built of a wireless LAN protocol packets based on IEEE 802.11?
Q. how is the built of a wireless LAN protocol packets based on IEEE 802.11?
Asked by david_efw - Tue Jul 11 05:51:23 2006 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. if that's you concept of english, I don't think any explnation is gonna make sense to you but- by 'built' you mean how are they arranged, same as internet packets if you mean what is it, IEEE is group that standerizes protocals, 802.1g is the newest, and is used for all the new WIFI stuff, also 802.1b is the runner up, I don't know why their names aren't concurrent
Answered by ryandebraal - Tue Jul 11 06:16:50 2006
Q. how is the built of a wireless LAN protocol packets based on IEEE 802.11?
Asked by david_efw - Tue Jul 11 05:51:23 2006 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. if that's you concept of english, I don't think any explnation is gonna make sense to you but- by 'built' you mean how are they arranged, same as internet packets if you mean what is it, IEEE is group that standerizes protocals, 802.1g is the newest, and is used for all the new WIFI stuff, also 802.1b is the runner up, I don't know why their names aren't concurrent
Answered by ryandebraal - Tue Jul 11 06:16:50 2006
IEEE 802.11,help?
Q. I heard this is the network the nintendo wii will work on.its supposed to be Wi-Fi.Could this be connect to landline broadband or do i have to buy an enhancement?
Asked by Talach_Ninneed - Thu Sep 21 13:52:55 2006 - - 3 Answers - 0 Comments
A. The official Nintendo Wii website doesn't say anything about how it hooks up, but I do know that on recent consoles (ie Xbox 360) you have to buy a seperate wireless adapter and have a wireless router certified to work with that specific console.
Answered by rgletur - Thu Sep 21 14:08:23 2006
Q. I heard this is the network the nintendo wii will work on.its supposed to be Wi-Fi.Could this be connect to landline broadband or do i have to buy an enhancement?
Asked by Talach_Ninneed - Thu Sep 21 13:52:55 2006 - - 3 Answers - 0 Comments
A. The official Nintendo Wii website doesn't say anything about how it hooks up, but I do know that on recent consoles (ie Xbox 360) you have to buy a seperate wireless adapter and have a wireless router certified to work with that specific console.
Answered by rgletur - Thu Sep 21 14:08:23 2006
Discuss the design issue in making the frame format of IEEE 802.11 wireless LAN and IEEE 802.3 frame format.?
Q. Discuss the design issue in making the frame format of IEEE 802.11 wireless LAN and IEEE 802.3 frame format.?
Asked by Aman - Sat May 9 05:28:19 2009 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
Q. Discuss the design issue in making the frame format of IEEE 802.11 wireless LAN and IEEE 802.3 frame format.?
Asked by Aman - Sat May 9 05:28:19 2009 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
What is the difference between the CSMA/CA and CSMA/CD?
Q. And how the problem of collision is solved in IEEE 802.11 standard
Asked by bizness - Wed Oct 28 17:22:39 2009 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. CSMA/CA waits for traffic to stop before transmitting to avoid a collision. CSMA/CD transmits and stops if a collision occurs.
Answered by jda - Wed Oct 28 21:05:48 2009
Q. And how the problem of collision is solved in IEEE 802.11 standard
Asked by bizness - Wed Oct 28 17:22:39 2009 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. CSMA/CA waits for traffic to stop before transmitting to avoid a collision. CSMA/CD transmits and stops if a collision occurs.
Answered by jda - Wed Oct 28 21:05:48 2009
How do I strengthen my laptop's in built WI Fi Signal transmission/reception strength?
Q. My Laptop model is IBM T 41 it has usb ports but no Antenna connector. The inbuilt wifi is IEEE 802.11 a/b/g.
Asked by reachdeb - Fri Jan 20 00:39:47 2006 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. I have a T40. Most laptops hide its antenna next to the LCD screen (be careful, not to break it). Thus, you can either re-mount that antenna out-of-LCD or get a USB/PCMCIA wireless card with high-gain antenna.
Answered by 1337student - Fri Jan 20 05:57:11 2006
Q. My Laptop model is IBM T 41 it has usb ports but no Antenna connector. The inbuilt wifi is IEEE 802.11 a/b/g.
Asked by reachdeb - Fri Jan 20 00:39:47 2006 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. I have a T40. Most laptops hide its antenna next to the LCD screen (be careful, not to break it). Thus, you can either re-mount that antenna out-of-LCD or get a USB/PCMCIA wireless card with high-gain antenna.
Answered by 1337student - Fri Jan 20 05:57:11 2006
please help with my wireless card?
Q. im tryin 2 connect to the internet at my friends house but i cant. i think its because my wireless card isnt compatible with my friends router. its the Instant Access Network PC Card ver. 3 Linkys. im not sure what kind of wireless signals it can pick up so please tell me if it can pick up IEEE 802.11 b/g/n or what else . please and thank u.
Asked by odfjgvokdfgokfj - Mon Sep 1 19:31:47 2008 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
Q. im tryin 2 connect to the internet at my friends house but i cant. i think its because my wireless card isnt compatible with my friends router. its the Instant Access Network PC Card ver. 3 Linkys. im not sure what kind of wireless signals it can pick up so please tell me if it can pick up IEEE 802.11 b/g/n or what else . please and thank u.
Asked by odfjgvokdfgokfj - Mon Sep 1 19:31:47 2008 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
how 802.3 frames are translated to 802.11 frames?
Q. i found that 802.11 devices translates 802.3 frames to 802.11 frames and vise versa before sending them on wireless link, they even use it for Wireless bridging between Access points(Wireless Distribution System). i have included the links below then the file "A04 AVAYA Wireless IEEE 802.11 architecture(good,45pp).p pt" (abt. traffic flow between stations) I read 802.1H std but it does not says anything on 802.3 to 802.11 translation. which i want to know. any body knowing please help. how the frame is translated, please give some concrete information.
Asked by Sudeepta - Mon Jan 21 05:17:43 2008 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
A. 802.3 frames can easily be translated to 802.11 as they are using common 802.2 LLC frame. for ethernet frames which use type 2 or other types make it harder it should be done through SNAP frame translation.
Answered by mani m - Sun Jan 27 06:54:01 2008
Q. i found that 802.11 devices translates 802.3 frames to 802.11 frames and vise versa before sending them on wireless link, they even use it for Wireless bridging between Access points(Wireless Distribution System). i have included the links below then the file "A04 AVAYA Wireless IEEE 802.11 architecture(good,45pp).p pt" (abt. traffic flow between stations) I read 802.1H std but it does not says anything on 802.3 to 802.11 translation. which i want to know. any body knowing please help. how the frame is translated, please give some concrete information.
Asked by Sudeepta - Mon Jan 21 05:17:43 2008 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
A. 802.3 frames can easily be translated to 802.11 as they are using common 802.2 LLC frame. for ethernet frames which use type 2 or other types make it harder it should be done through SNAP frame translation.
Answered by mani m - Sun Jan 27 06:54:01 2008
UK specs of the new 80gb PS3
Q. Could someone confirm if these are indeed the specs i'll get if i buy the new 80gb PS3 from game or Amazon? PS3 Technical Specifications / Details PS3 system (80GB HDD version): Dimensions: Approximately 325mm (W) x 98mm (H) x 274mm (D) CPU: Cell Broadband Engine GPU: RSX Main Memory: 256MB XDR Main RAM Embedded VRAM: 256MB GDDR3 VRAM Hard Drive Disk: 2.5 Serial ATA (80 GB HDD) Main Input/Output: USB 2.0 (x4), MemoryStick/SD/CompactFla sh Ethernet: 10BASE-T, 100BASE-TX, 1000BASE-T Bluetooth: 2.0 (EDR), Wireless Controller (up to 7) Wireless Communication: IEEE 802.11 b/g Screen Size: 480i, 480p, 720p, 1080i, 1080p HDMI: HDMI out (x1/HDMI) Analog: av mutli out x1 Digital Audio: digital out (OPTICAL x1) Disc Drive: Blu-ra [cont.]
Asked by slimfisty - Mon Aug 11 13:33:49 2008 - - 0 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Yep, the exact specs listed in the manual for my PS3.
Answered by pwnage_gamer@rocketmail.com - Mon Aug 11 13:37:05 2008
Q. Could someone confirm if these are indeed the specs i'll get if i buy the new 80gb PS3 from game or Amazon? PS3 Technical Specifications / Details PS3 system (80GB HDD version): Dimensions: Approximately 325mm (W) x 98mm (H) x 274mm (D) CPU: Cell Broadband Engine GPU: RSX Main Memory: 256MB XDR Main RAM Embedded VRAM: 256MB GDDR3 VRAM Hard Drive Disk: 2.5 Serial ATA (80 GB HDD) Main Input/Output: USB 2.0 (x4), MemoryStick/SD/CompactFla sh Ethernet: 10BASE-T, 100BASE-TX, 1000BASE-T Bluetooth: 2.0 (EDR), Wireless Controller (up to 7) Wireless Communication: IEEE 802.11 b/g Screen Size: 480i, 480p, 720p, 1080i, 1080p HDMI: HDMI out (x1/HDMI) Analog: av mutli out x1 Digital Audio: digital out (OPTICAL x1) Disc Drive: Blu-ra [cont.]
Asked by slimfisty - Mon Aug 11 13:33:49 2008 - - 0 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Yep, the exact specs listed in the manual for my PS3.
Answered by pwnage_gamer@rocketmail.com - Mon Aug 11 13:37:05 2008
what are networking standards?
Q. IEEE 802.11 ? any examples? thankyou
Asked by Mark - Mon Mar 9 07:42:45 2009 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
A. try this:
Answered by James786 - Mon Mar 9 10:15:58 2009
Q. IEEE 802.11 ? any examples? thankyou
Asked by Mark - Mon Mar 9 07:42:45 2009 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
A. try this:
Answered by James786 - Mon Mar 9 10:15:58 2009
Can this laptop play left4dead?
Q. Here are the specs: Platform Technology Intel Centrino Built-in Devices Wireless LAN antenna, Stereo speakers, Bluetooth antenna Notebook type Thin-and-light (4-6 lbs.), Budget Screen type Widescreen Wireless capabilities IEEE 802.11b, IEEE 802.11g, Bluetooth, IEEE 802.11 n (draft) Processor Intel Core 2 Duo T5800 2 GHz Multi-Core processor technology Dual-Core 64-bit processor Yes Cache Memory Type L2 cache Cache size 2 MB RAM Installed Size 4 GB/8 GB (Maximum) RAM Technology DDR2 sdram ram form factor so dimm 200-pin RAM configuration features 2 x 2 GB Storage controller type Serial ATA Storage Controller/Serial ATA Interface Serial ATA-150 Hard Drive 320 GB - Serial ATA-150 - 5400 RPM Hard drive type … [cont.]
Asked by Jeremy Audrick G. - Wed Jul 29 11:44:22 2009 - - 3 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Your laptop should be able to handle left for dead fairly well, depending on your settings of course. The processors and everything else is clear. The only choke it has on it is the video card but i think at medium settings, it shouldn't be a problem. Make sure to check your video settings carefully. Anti-alising will kill your gaming experience on that laptop if you don't turn it off. Just don't try to run too much while you're playing. I had a laptop similar with a step down from you and it ran well. Have fun gaming.
Answered by ryan d - Wed Jul 29 11:52:21 2009
Q. Here are the specs: Platform Technology Intel Centrino Built-in Devices Wireless LAN antenna, Stereo speakers, Bluetooth antenna Notebook type Thin-and-light (4-6 lbs.), Budget Screen type Widescreen Wireless capabilities IEEE 802.11b, IEEE 802.11g, Bluetooth, IEEE 802.11 n (draft) Processor Intel Core 2 Duo T5800 2 GHz Multi-Core processor technology Dual-Core 64-bit processor Yes Cache Memory Type L2 cache Cache size 2 MB RAM Installed Size 4 GB/8 GB (Maximum) RAM Technology DDR2 sdram ram form factor so dimm 200-pin RAM configuration features 2 x 2 GB Storage controller type Serial ATA Storage Controller/Serial ATA Interface Serial ATA-150 Hard Drive 320 GB - Serial ATA-150 - 5400 RPM Hard drive type … [cont.]
Asked by Jeremy Audrick G. - Wed Jul 29 11:44:22 2009 - - 3 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Your laptop should be able to handle left for dead fairly well, depending on your settings of course. The processors and everything else is clear. The only choke it has on it is the video card but i think at medium settings, it shouldn't be a problem. Make sure to check your video settings carefully. Anti-alising will kill your gaming experience on that laptop if you don't turn it off. Just don't try to run too much while you're playing. I had a laptop similar with a step down from you and it ran well. Have fun gaming.
Answered by ryan d - Wed Jul 29 11:52:21 2009
can some 1 explain all of this too me mostly the rsx cell and blue ray?
Q. CPU Cell Processor PowerPC-base Core @3.2GHz 1 VMX vector unit per core 512KB L2 cache 7 x SPE @3.2GHz 7 x 128b 128 SIMD GPRs 7 x 256KB SRAM for SPE * 1 of 8 SPEs reserved for redundancy total floating point performance : 218 gflops gpu rsx @550MHz 1.8 TFLOPS floating point performance Full HD (up to 1080p) x 2 channels Multi-way programmable parallel floating point shader pipelines Sound Dolby 5.1ch, DTS, LPCM, etc. (Cell-base processing) Memory 256MB XDR Main RAM @3.2GHz 256MB GDDR3 VRAM @700MHz System Bandwidth Main RAM 25.6GB/s VRAM 22.4GB/s RSX 20GB/s (write) + 15GB/s (read) SB 2.5GB/s (write) + 2.5GB/s (read) System Floating Point Performance 2 tflops storage HDD Detachable 2.5 HDD slot x 1 I/O USB Front x 4, Rear x 2 (USB2.0) [cont.]
Asked by @ ____$()$@ - Tue Jul 25 14:01:15 2006 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Sony pictures studios culver city, CA MAY 16, 2005 NVIDIA Corporation (Nasdaq: NVDA) a worldwide leader in graphics and digital media processors, provided a first look at the powerful graphics architecture of playstation 3 at a press conference held today by Sony Computer Entertainment (SCE). NVIDIA and SCE are jointly developing a new graphics processor for playstation 3. Codenamed RSX, the new processor will connect directly to Cell, the advanced microprocessor developed by IBM, Sony Group, and Toshiba. RSX is jointly developed by NVIDIA, the number one company in PC graphics, and SCE, the leader in computer entertainment, said Ken Kutaragi, president and group CEO, Sony Computer Entertainment Inc. This cutting-edge graphics… [cont.]
Answered by girish4music - Tue Jul 25 14:11:13 2006
Q. CPU Cell Processor PowerPC-base Core @3.2GHz 1 VMX vector unit per core 512KB L2 cache 7 x SPE @3.2GHz 7 x 128b 128 SIMD GPRs 7 x 256KB SRAM for SPE * 1 of 8 SPEs reserved for redundancy total floating point performance : 218 gflops gpu rsx @550MHz 1.8 TFLOPS floating point performance Full HD (up to 1080p) x 2 channels Multi-way programmable parallel floating point shader pipelines Sound Dolby 5.1ch, DTS, LPCM, etc. (Cell-base processing) Memory 256MB XDR Main RAM @3.2GHz 256MB GDDR3 VRAM @700MHz System Bandwidth Main RAM 25.6GB/s VRAM 22.4GB/s RSX 20GB/s (write) + 15GB/s (read) SB 2.5GB/s (write) + 2.5GB/s (read) System Floating Point Performance 2 tflops storage HDD Detachable 2.5 HDD slot x 1 I/O USB Front x 4, Rear x 2 (USB2.0) [cont.]
Asked by @ ____$()$@ - Tue Jul 25 14:01:15 2006 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Sony pictures studios culver city, CA MAY 16, 2005 NVIDIA Corporation (Nasdaq: NVDA) a worldwide leader in graphics and digital media processors, provided a first look at the powerful graphics architecture of playstation 3 at a press conference held today by Sony Computer Entertainment (SCE). NVIDIA and SCE are jointly developing a new graphics processor for playstation 3. Codenamed RSX, the new processor will connect directly to Cell, the advanced microprocessor developed by IBM, Sony Group, and Toshiba. RSX is jointly developed by NVIDIA, the number one company in PC graphics, and SCE, the leader in computer entertainment, said Ken Kutaragi, president and group CEO, Sony Computer Entertainment Inc. This cutting-edge graphics… [cont.]
Answered by girish4music - Tue Jul 25 14:11:13 2006
wireless connection speed 11 Mbps?
Q. i have a router (linksys WRT54G) and a laptop that has a (LAN-Express IEEE 802.11 PCI Adapter) my laptop connects but it remains at 11 Mbps speed and doesnt receive any packets... pls help...
Asked by allstar - Wed Dec 19 06:26:25 2007 - - 4 Answers - 0 Comments
A. I'm guessing it's an older laptop ... 11mbps is about the same speed as USB 1 ... you'll probably get closer to 7 or 8 mbps which is fine for most net surfing (other than big downloads) ... if your not getting ANY packets it's more a configuration setting with your network or firewall rather than your card
Answered by Jack K - Wed Dec 19 06:38:58 2007
Q. i have a router (linksys WRT54G) and a laptop that has a (LAN-Express IEEE 802.11 PCI Adapter) my laptop connects but it remains at 11 Mbps speed and doesnt receive any packets... pls help...
Asked by allstar - Wed Dec 19 06:26:25 2007 - - 4 Answers - 0 Comments
A. I'm guessing it's an older laptop ... 11mbps is about the same speed as USB 1 ... you'll probably get closer to 7 or 8 mbps which is fine for most net surfing (other than big downloads) ... if your not getting ANY packets it's more a configuration setting with your network or firewall rather than your card
Answered by Jack K - Wed Dec 19 06:38:58 2007
my laptop cant connect to a router..(linksys wireless-B)?
Q. i have a dell laptop...my friend has a cafe, it has wifi zone..it's router is a linksys wireless-B...other laptops can access it...but why mine cant? does this have to do with the IEEE 802.11 standards? the router is obviously IEEE 802.11B..and i think the wireless adapter of my laptop is 802.11g? does a device with different 802.11 standards not compatible?
Asked by Satan Jr. - Sun Nov 15 07:25:20 2009 - - 7 Answers - 0 Comments
Q. i have a dell laptop...my friend has a cafe, it has wifi zone..it's router is a linksys wireless-B...other laptops can access it...but why mine cant? does this have to do with the IEEE 802.11 standards? the router is obviously IEEE 802.11B..and i think the wireless adapter of my laptop is 802.11g? does a device with different 802.11 standards not compatible?
Asked by Satan Jr. - Sun Nov 15 07:25:20 2009 - - 7 Answers - 0 Comments
wii online?????
Q. online it says that wii can connect wirelessly by a IEEE 802.11 or a Wii LAN Adaptor I dont have any wireless connections but i have dsl so do i have to buy something extra to connect online? I know its a stupid question but i dont know a whole bunch about wireless connectivity.
Asked by smi - Wed Nov 22 16:44:34 2006 - - 1 Answers - 1 Comments
A. Alright the solution is quite simple you have two options. The first and probably slightly more inconvenient option is to by a usb chord and plug it into your Wii then your DSL modem and the second option is to by a Nintendo Wi-Fi Usb port for about 30.00 dollars and all you have to do is plug it in to your computer and u are connected!
Answered by darkmage1235 - Wed Nov 22 16:48:39 2006
Q. online it says that wii can connect wirelessly by a IEEE 802.11 or a Wii LAN Adaptor I dont have any wireless connections but i have dsl so do i have to buy something extra to connect online? I know its a stupid question but i dont know a whole bunch about wireless connectivity.
Asked by smi - Wed Nov 22 16:44:34 2006 - - 1 Answers - 1 Comments
A. Alright the solution is quite simple you have two options. The first and probably slightly more inconvenient option is to by a usb chord and plug it into your Wii then your DSL modem and the second option is to by a Nintendo Wi-Fi Usb port for about 30.00 dollars and all you have to do is plug it in to your computer and u are connected!
Answered by darkmage1235 - Wed Nov 22 16:48:39 2006
From Yahoo Answer Search: 'IEEE 802.11'
Sat Jul 31 18:41:34 2010 [ refresh local cache ]
[Hide]▼
ZyXEL offers NWD-270N Wireless N-Lite USB Adapter - TechShout! (blog)
Tue, 06 Jul 2010 13:36:59 GMT+00:00
TechShout! (blog) Support for soft AP mode and backwards compatibility with IEEE 802.11 b/g have also been added. As of now, there's no official word on its pricing and ...
Tue, 06 Jul 2010 13:36:59 GMT+00:00
TechShout! (blog) Support for soft AP mode and backwards compatibility with IEEE 802.11 b/g have also been added. As of now, there's no official word on its pricing and ...
IEEE 802 11 WLAN gif
600px x 462px | 46.50kB
[source page]
IEEE 802 11 WLAN ieee 80211 wlan pdf 178 43 KB
600px x 462px | 46.50kB
[source page]
IEEE 802 11 WLAN ieee 80211 wlan pdf 178 43 KB
Rosewill RNX-N300 IEEE 802.11 b/g/n Wireless-N 2.0 PCI (1T2R) Up to ...
unknown
Sun, 18 Jul 2010 10:14:36 GM
Rosewill RNX-N300 . IEEE 802.11. b/g/n Wireless-N 2.0 PCI (1T2R) Up to 300Mbps Download Data Rates/ WPA/WPA2 (AES, 64128-WEP with shared-key authentication) Cisco CCS V1.0, V2.0 and V3.0 compliant/ Vista/ Win7.
unknown
Sun, 18 Jul 2010 10:14:36 GM
Rosewill RNX-N300 . IEEE 802.11. b/g/n Wireless-N 2.0 PCI (1T2R) Up to 300Mbps Download Data Rates/ WPA/WPA2 (AES, 64128-WEP with shared-key authentication) Cisco CCS V1.0, V2.0 and V3.0 compliant/ Vista/ Win7.
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