Welcome to Wireless Networking Basics |
Wireless Networking Basics
|
Home |
About Us | Contact Us | Articles | ||||||||||
Troubleshooting, Tips And Tweaks
For example, you can create an ad hoc configuration for your home WLAN and an infrastructure mode configuration for your office, then switch between the two profiles as needed. I recommend setting up profiles on any computers you plan to move between your home network and some other WLAN; the time you spend now will save much more time and aggravation later.
WEP Encryption
Among the options you'll see for activating wireless encryption, 128-bit WEP is a safe bet. Older 40 or 64-bit WEP offers inadequate protection. A few 802.11g products support 152-bit or 256-bit WEP, that is fine too, if all of your gear supports it. Newer equipment offers WPA. General-purpose WPA is unnecessarily complex for a home WLAN, but WPA-PSK works well.
To set 128-bit WEP, pick and assign a number called a WEP passkey. You must apply the same WEP settings and passkey to the access point (router) and all adapters.
General Tips
If you've finished installing the components, but your home network isn't functioning correctly, troubleshoot methodically:
Can't reach the Internet? Temporarily turn off your firewall to determine whether you have a firewall configuration problem, or some other issue.
Likewise, turn on and test your wireless adapters one by one, to determine if problems are isolated to a single computer or common to all.
Try ad hoc networking if infrastructure networking isn't functional, and perhaps you'll identify a problem with your access point or router.
To help you work methodically, as you build your network, write down on paper the key settings like network name, WEP passkey, MAC addresses, and channel numbers (then eat the evidence afterward!).
Don't worry about making mistakes; you can go back and alter any of your WLAN settings any time.
Finally, don't be surprised if your wireless LAN performance doesn't match the numbers quoted by the manufacturer. For example, although 802.11b equipment technically supports 11 Mbps bandwidth, that is a theoretical maximum never achieved in practice. A significant amount of Wi-Fi network bandwidth is consumed by overhead that you cannot control. Expect to see more than about one-half the maximum bandwidth (5.5 Mbps at most for 802.11b, about 20 Mbps at most for the others) on your home WLAN.
Conclusion
Armed with the information contained in this tutorial, you're now well on your way to building a working home WLAN. Welcome to the world of wireless networking!
| Troubleshooting Tips and Tweaks Navigation Article
/ Links
More Resources
|
We strive to provide only quality articles, so if there is a specific topic related to wireless networking that you would like us to cover, please contact us at any time. And again, thank you to those contributing daily to our Troubleshooting Tips and Tweaks website.
|
|||||||||||
Home | About Us | Contact Us | Articles |
|||||||||||||
© 2008 Wireless Networking Basics. All rights reserved. Troubleshooting Tips and Tweaks