What Is Wi-Fi?

   

The very short version is that Wi-Fi is a way for wireless devices to communicate.

Wi-Fi, short for wireless fidelity, is the Wi-Fi Alliance's name for a wireless standard, or protocol, used for wireless communication. I'll tell you a bit more about this wireless standard and its variations, known collectively as IEEE 802.11, in Chapter 2, "Understanding Wi-Fi." (IEEE stands for the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, which defines the standard.)

THE WI-FI ALLIANCE

The Wi-Fi Alliance is a not-for-profit organization that certifies the interoperability of wireless devices built around the 802.11 standard. The goals of the Wi-Fi Alliance are to promote interoperability of devices based on 802.11, and, presumably, to promote and enhance the standard.

For better or worse, this is no neutral organization. The members of the Wi-Fi Alliance are manufacturers that build 802.11 devices. As of this writing, there are 205 companies that belong to the Wi-Fi Alliance and more than 900 products that have been certified as Wi-Fi interoperable.

The promise that the Wi-Fi Alliance makes is that if you buy an 802.11 device with the Wi-Fi seal of certification, the device will work seamlessly with any other Wi-Fi certified device.

You can find more information about the Wi-Fi Alliance at the Alliance's Web site, www.wi-fi.org.


Standards and protocols are mostly of interest to engineers (however, see the sidebar "What Is a Standard?" for more information if you are curious).

WHAT IS A STANDARD?

The words standard and protocol are essentially synonymous (protocol is a slightly more technical term). When used in its engineering context, a standard means the technical form of something such as a message or a communication. In other words, a standard might specify how the communication is made.

If you know the standard, you know how to decode the message. In order to work with a standard (called complying with a standard), a device needs to know both how to encode into the standard and decode from the standard.

A standard for working with communications, such as the Wi-Fi standard, will generally involve specifications both at the hardware and the software level (in geek-speak, these levels are called layers).

You can think of the standard as a kind of secret handshake that gets you into a club. If you (or your wireless device) know how the secret handshake works, you can find out what the other people in the club (the other wireless devices) are actually saying.


But Wi-Fi has garnered a huge amount of attention from people who would normally be unconcerned about engineering details: in other words, normal human beings like you and me. Students, professionals, homemakers, English Lit majors, and office workers are all talking about Wi-Fi.

The really big question is: Why is Wi-Fi getting all this attention? I'll get to that soon. I'll also show you how Wi-Fi can change your life (for real!). But first I'd like to tell you a little bit more about what Wi-Fi is.

For now, you need to know that Wi-Fi devices are certified interoperable and run on some flavor of 802.11, a medium-range wireless networking standard. 802.11 runs at speeds roughly comparable to those of wired networks. (I'll be telling you in more detail about transmission speeds in Chapter 2.)

Wireless Spectrums

Unlike many other wireless standards, 802.11 runs on "free" portions of the radio spectrum. This means that (unlike cell telephone communications) no license is required to broadcast or communicate using 802.11 (or Wi-Fi).

The free portions of the radio spectrum used by 802.11 (and Wi-Fi) are the 2.4GHz band, and, more recently, the 5GHz band. As you may know, many household appliances such as microwave ovens and (most significantly) wireless telephone handsets also use these free spectrums.

With a wireless telephone handset, a base station is connected to the telephone line, and the handset communicates with the base station over the "free" radio frequency, so that you can roam about your home or office while talking on the phone. Clearly, these wireless telephone handsets are not the same thing as cell phones, which do not connect to a telephone wire at all and use licensed portions of the spectrum.

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In this increasingly complex world of ours, there are more and more appliances and devices that broadcast and receive wireless signals, many of them on the same "free" radio spectrums used by Wi-Fi.


The 802.11 (and Wi-Fi) standard includes what is called a physical layer. This physical layer uses something known as Direct Sequence Spread Spectrum technology (DSSS) to prevent collisions and avoid interference between devices operating on the same spectrum. You'll find much the same kind of technology in your wireless telephone handset. The idea here is that you don't want the signal coming out of your microwave unit to interfere with your email (or vice versa).

In addition to its physical layer, each 802.11 Wi-Fi device has an access control layer. The access control layer specifies how a Wi-Fi device, such as a mobile computer, communicates with another Wi-Fi device, such as a wireless access point.

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If you find that your Wi-Fi device is getting interference from some other appliance such as a microwave or wireless telephone, one of the first things to try is moving either your Wi-Fi device, or the other device, to a new physical location.


A recent addition to the Wi-Fi standard is the Wi-Fi Protected Access solution (WPA). WPA will be explained in greater detail in Chapter 19, "Securing Your Wi-Fi Network."

Together, the physical and access control layers, along with extensions intended to implement extra features (such as WAP for security) make up the 802.11 Wi-Fi standard.

Using Wi-Fi

If you've picked up this book, you probably have a use in mind for Wi-Fi. More precisely, you have a use in mind for a device that uses the Wi-Fi standard to broadcast and receive information.

The two most common uses for these devices both involve freedom:

  • You can work almost anywhere by using a mobile Wi-Fi device to connect to the Internet without wires when away from your home or office.

  • You can free yourself from the need to drill holes and snake wires by creating a network at the home or office using Wi-Fi devices.

In this chapter, I'll give you a picture of the hundred-mile view of each of these important uses for Wi-Fi devices. Your perspective is going to be pretty different if you've bought this book to learn how best to take your laptop on the road (or what kind of mobile device to buy) than if you've bought this book to learn how to create a wireless network.

Some preliminary footwork is necessary to both topics. These preliminaries are explained in this first part of the book, "Why Wi-Fi?"

But if you're reading this book to learn to travel with Wi-Fi, I've got lots of information and goodies for you (see Chapter 3, "Hitting the Road with Wi-Fi," and Part III, "Going Mobile with Wi-Fi"). On the other hand, if your primary interest is in setting up a wireless network, you may just want to turn straight away to Part IV, "Creating a Wi-Fi Network."

You'll find everything you always wanted to know about buying and configuring a Wi-Fi device in Part II, "Setting Up Your Computer for Wi-Fi."

Part V, "Securing Your Wi-Fi Computer and Network," provides plentiful information about that perennially pesky topic, security and wireless computing.



Absolute Beginner's Guide to Wi-Fi(r) Wireless Networking
Absolute Beginner's Guide to Wi-Fi(r) Wireless Networking
ISBN: N/A
EAN: N/A
Year: 2006
Pages: 178

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