Question:
what is wifi connection?
Mohamed
2009-07-02 06:47:45 UTC
what is wifi connection modem?what is the cost of modem
Three answers:
oracle128au
2009-07-02 07:05:16 UTC
WiFi is a wireless local network connection type, a marketing term for the set of 802.11x wireless networking standards. It does not require a modem of any code, though it does require a wireless access point and client machines with matching compatible wireless devices.
?
2009-07-02 14:00:04 UTC
it is a built in Wireless connection to the internet and it needs aWIRELESSss signal
Joe G
2009-07-02 13:52:32 UTC
Interested in contributing to Wikipedia?

Wi-Fi

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia





Wi-Fi logo

The Internet Protocol Suite

Application Layer

BGP · DHCP · DNS · FTP · GTP · HTTP · IMAP · IRC · Megaco · MGCP · NNTP · NTP · POP · RIP · RPC · RTP · RTSP · SDP · SIP · SMTP · SNMP · SOAP · SSH · Telnet · TLS/SSL · XMPP · (more)

Transport Layer

TCP · UDP · DCCP · SCTP · RSVP · ECN · (more)

Internet Layer

IP (IPv4, IPv6) · ICMP · ICMPv6 · IGMP · IPsec · (more)

Link Layer

ARP · RARP · NDP · OSPF · Tunnels (L2TP) · PPP · Media Access Control (Ethernet, MPLS, DSL, ISDN, FDDI) · Device Drivers · (more)

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Wi-Fi (pronounced /ˈwaɪfaɪ/) is a trademark of the Wi-Fi Alliance for certified products based on the IEEE 802.11 standards. This certification warrants interoperability between different wireless devices.

In some countries the term Wi-Fi[1][2] is often used by the public as a synonym for wireless LAN (WLAN); but not every wireless LAN product has a Wi-Fi certification, which may be because of certification costs that must be paid for each certified device type.

Wi-Fi is supported by most personal computer operating systems, many game consoles, laptops, smartphones, printers, and other peripherals.

Contents [hide]

1 History

2 Uses

3 Advantages and challenges

3.1 Operational advantages

3.2 Limitations

3.3 Reach

3.4 Mobility

3.5 Threats to security

3.6 Population

3.7 Channel pollution

4 Hardware

4.1 Standard devices

4.2 Distance records

4.3 Embedded systems

5 Network security

5.1 Securing methods

5.2 Piggybacking

6 City wide Wi-Fi

7 Origin and meaning of the term Wi-Fi

8 Wi-Fi Alliance

9 See also

10 References

[edit]History







Half-size ISA 2.4 GHz WaveLAN card by AT&T

Wi-Fi uses both single carrier direct-sequence spread spectrum radio technology (part of the larger family of spread spectrum systems) and multi-carrier OFDM (Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing) radio technology. The regulations for unlicensed spread spectrum enabled the development of Wi-Fi, its onetime competitor HomeRF, Bluetooth, and many other products such as some types of cordless telephones.

Unlicensed spread spectrum was first made available in the US by the Federal Communications Commission in 1985 and these FCC regulations were later copied with some changes in many other countries enabling use of this technology in all major countries.[3] The FCC action was proposed by Michael Marcus of the FCC staff in 1980 and the subsequent regulatory action took 5 more years. It was part of a broader proposal to allow civil use of spread spectrum technology and was opposed at the time by mainstream equipment manufacturers and many radio system operators.[4]

The precursor to Wi-Fi was invented in 1991 by NCR Corporation/AT&T (later Lucent & Agere Systems) in Nieuwegein, the Netherlands. It was initially intended for cashier systems; the first wireless products were brought on the market under the name WaveLAN with speeds of 1 Mbit/s to 2 Mbit/s. Vic Hayes, who held the chair of IEEE 802.11 for 10 years and has been named the 'father of Wi-Fi,' was involved in designing standards such as IEEE 802.11b, and 802.11a.

The original patents behind 802.11 Wi-Fi technology, filed in 1996, are held by the CSIRO, an Australian research body. The patents have been the subject of protracted and ongoing legal battles between the CSIRO and major IT corporations over the non-payment of royalties. In 2009 the CSIRO reached a settlement with 14 companies, including Hewlett-Packard, Intel, Dell, Toshiba, ASUS, Microsoft and Nintendo, on the condition that the CSIRO did not broadcast the resolution. [5][6][7]

[edit]Uses







A roof mounted Wi-Fi antenna





A Wi-Fi antenna

A Wi-Fi enabled device such as a PC, game console, mobile phone, MP3 player or PDA can connect to the Internet when within range of a wireless network connected to the Internet. The coverage of one or more interconnected access points — called a hotspot — can comprise an area as small as a single room with wireless-opaque walls or as large as many square miles covered by overlapping access points. Wi-Fi technology has served to set up mesh networks, for example, in London.[8] Both architectures can operate in community networks.

In addition to restricted use in homes and offices, Wi-Fi can make access publicly available at Wi-Fi hotspots provided either free of charge or to subscribers to various providers. Organizations and businesses such as airports, hotels and restaurants often provide free hotspots to attract or assist clients. Enthusiasts or authorities who wish to provide services or even to promote business in a given area sometimes provide free Wi-Fi access. There are already more than 300 metropolitan-wide Wi-Fi (Muni-Fi) projects in progress.[9] There were 879 Wi-Fi based Wireless Internet service providers in the Czech Republic as of May 2008.[10][11]

Wi-Fi also allows connectivity in peer-to-peer (wirel


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