Thursday, February 4, 2010

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Does WLAN integration mean upgrading your wired network?

Posted: 04 Feb 2010 10:27 AM PST

February 04, 2010 Published by  SearchNetworking.com

Wireless LANs

SearchNetworking.com
Preparing your wired network for wireless network integration
Lisa Phifer, Contributor

As enterprise networks incorporate more wireless access and backhaul links, traffic flows and loads will change. New mobile applications like WLAN voice and video will introduce quality of service (QoS) challenges. Identifying and planning network infrastructure updates to address these needs can help any wireless network integration go more smoothly.

Networking pros will find themselves considering the need to re-engineer traffic to avoid bottlenecks, upgrade switches, and implement a host of mechanisms to ensure QoS for multimedia applications running on the WLAN.
Read more about how to upgrade your wireless network for wireless integration.


Enterprise wireless LAN security: 802.11 and seamless wireless roaming
Learn how to secure your enterprise wireless local area network (LAN) with this guide of industry best practices, methods and techniques. Wireless networking expert Lisa Phifer explains how network security is affected by the wireless IEEE 802.11n protocol; how to secure embedded 802.11n wireless devices; and how to maintain a persistent, secure connection for roaming WiMAX, 3G and 802.11a/b/g/n networks.
Learn more about WLAN security in this article.


Q: I would like to know how ad-hoc mode stations work if both legacy and 802.11n peers are present. Are there network based restrictions depending on the order of who joined first?
A: Wi-Fi ad-hoc mode involves direct peer-to-peer communication between 802.11 stations. The 802.11n standard includes several new rules pertaining specifically to this mode of operation, technically referred to as an independent basic service set (IBSS) ...
Read more of this expert answer.


FIND MORE WIRELESS LAN IMPLEMENTATION INFORMATION HERE.


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Heloise's Hints: Left Clothes in the Dryer Too Long

Posted: 04 Feb 2010 10:24 AM PST

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Logo Beliefnet Heloises Hints

Today's Hint



Heloise, on her Russian made URAL motorcycle (2005) with a side car in front of the Alamo, San Antonio, Texas.
Left Clothes in the Dryer Too Long?

When you look to takeout and see that they are wrinkled, you can remove the wrinkles simply by putting a big damp towel into the dryer with the garments (don't overstuff). Dry again for about 15 minutes and take out immediately.

For more Hints, visit Heloise.com.

*DEALING WITH CLOTHING STAINS*
When you have a family, there are always a bunch of clothing stains that you have to handle and they all seem to need a different solution. Get instructions for all the solutions in a handy A to Z format in "Heloise’s Stain Guide for Clothing", an 8-page pamphlet. Click here to order.

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