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IEEE 802.11g Standard Tim Wells Microcomputer Networks (CIS362) Thursday, April 28, 2005.

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Presentation on theme: "IEEE 802.11g Standard Tim Wells Microcomputer Networks (CIS362) Thursday, April 28, 2005."— Presentation transcript:

1 IEEE 802.11g Standard Tim Wells Microcomputer Networks (CIS362) Thursday, April 28, 2005

2 What is 802.11g? IEEE Standard 802.11g is the latest Wireless Networking Standard that was created to increase range and speed while being compatible with the popular 802.11b.

3 Going Back In History… Before 802.11g There was: 802.11 802.11b 802.11a

4 IEEE 802.11 Standard approved1997 Max Data Rate1-2 Mbps ModulationDSSS Frequency2.4 GHz 802.11 had limited success due to low speeds and high prices.

5 IEEE 802.11b Standard approved1999 Max Data Rate11 Mbps ModulationDSSS + CCK Frequency2.4 GHz 802.11b greatly improved speed while maintaining compatibility with 802.11. 802.11b products received mainstream recognition as the first wireless products with acceptable speeds, affordable prices, and universal compatibility. More than 95% of todays WLAN infrastructure includes 802.11b products.

6 IEEE 802.11a Standard approved1999 Max Data Rate54 Mbps ModulationOFDM Frequency5.2 GHz 802.11a greatly increased speed, but decreased range. Even though the 802.11a standard was adopted in 1999, the first 802.11a products were not available until late 2001. 802.11a had a limited market response because of its incompatibility with 802.11b, shorter range, and higher costs.

7 IEEE 802.11g Standard approved2003 Max Data Rate54 Mbps (108 Mbps*) ModulationOFDM + CCK Frequency5.2 GHz 802.11g increased speed and range while maintaining compatibility with 802.11b. Even though 802.11g was not officially approved by IEEE until June 2003, products conforming to the draft were made available in late 2002. * With Atheros Super G

8 What is CCK? Complementary Code Checking Was incorporated into DSSS beginning with 802.11b to increase efficiency. CCK is a “single carrier” system, meaning that all data is transmitted by modulating a single radio frequency or carrier.

9 What is OFDM? Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing Was first implemented in 802.11a. OFDM is a “multi-carrier” modulation scheme. Data is split up among several closely spaced “subcarriers” or frequencies, increasing reliability and speed

10 Range Comparison

11 802.11g Operating Modes

12

13 Can 802.11g really get up to 108 Mbps? Yes, with Atheros’ Super G the maximum possible data rate is 108 Mbps, but the typical end user throughput is only 60+ Mbps

14 How does Atheros’ Super G make it faster? Frame bursting This allows a transmitting device to send multiple frames at once in a “burst”.

15 How does Atheros’ Super G make it faster? Fast Frames Fast Frames allows more information into each Frame

16 How does Atheros’ Super G make it faster? Compression Link-level hardware compression utilizes the connection more efficiently and maximizes bandwidth. Dynamic Turbo Dynamic Turbo can give a significant boost in bandwidth when required by demanding applications. It can trigger and double the apparent bandwidth by using 2 channels as one, without the user’s involvement.


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