LAN industry exceeded $300 million in 1998 and will grow to $1.6 billion in 2005. To date,
wireless LANs have been primarily implemented in vertical applications such as manufacturing
facilities, warehouses, and retail stores. The majority of future wireless LAN growth is expected in healthcare facilities, educational institutions, and corporate enterprise office spaces. In the corporation, conference rooms, public areas, and branch offices are likely venues for WLANs.
interoperability and compatibility of IEEE 802.11b wireless networking products and to
promote that standard for the enterprise, the small business, and the home. Members
include WLAN semiconductor manufacturers, WLAN providers, computer system vendors,
and software makers—such as 3Com, Aironet, Apple, Breezecom, Cabletron, Compaq, Dell, Fujitsu, IBM, Intersil, Lucent Technologies, No Wires Needed, Nokia, Samsung, Symbol Technologies, Wayport, and Zoom.
As the globally recognized LAN authority, the IEEE 802 committee has established the standards that have driven the LAN industry for the past two decades, including 802.3 Ethernet, 802.5 Token Ring, and 802.3z 100BASE-T Fast Ethernet. In 1997, after seven years of work, the IEEE published 802.11, the first internationally sanctioned standard for wireless
LANs. In September 1999 they ratified the 802.11b “High Rate” amendment to the standard, which added two higher speeds (5.5 and 11 Mbps) to 802.11.
Like all IEEE 802 standards, the 802.11 standards focus on the bottom two levels of the ISO model, the physical layer and data link layer (Figure 1 on page 4). Any LAN application, network operating system, or protocol, including TCP/IP and Novell NetWare, will run on an 802.11-compliant WLAN as easily as they run over Ethernet.
Figure 1. 802.11 and the OSI Model
802.11 Operating Modes
802.11 defines two pieces of equipment, a wireless station, which is usually a PC equipped with a wireless network interface card (NIC), and an access point (AP), which acts as a bridge between the wireless and wired networks. An access point usually consists of a radio, a wired network interface (e.g., 802.3), and bridging software conforming to the 802.1d bridging standard. The access point acts as the base station for the wireless network, aggregating access for multiple wireless stations onto the wired network. Wireless end stations can be 802.11 PC Card, PCI, or ISA NICs, or embedded solutions in non-PC clients (such as an 802.11-based telephone handset).
The 802.11 standard defines two modes: infrastructure mode and ad hoc mode. In infrastructure mode (Figure 2), the wireless network consists of at least one access point connected to the wired network infrastructure and a set of wireless end stations. This configuration is called a Basic Service Set (BSS). An Extended Service Set (ESS) is a set of two or more BSSs forming a single subnetwork. Since most corporate WLANs require access to the wired LAN for services (file servers, printers, Internet links) they will operate in infrastructure
mode.
Ad hoc mode (also called peer-to-peer mode or an Independent Basic Service Set, or IBSS) is simply a set of 802.11 wireless stations that communicate directly with one another without using an access point or any connection to a wired network (Figure 3). This mode is useful for quickly and easily setting up a wireless network anywhere that a wireless infrastructure does not exist or is not required for services, such as a hotel room, convention center, or airport, or where access to the wired network is barred (such as for consultants at a client site).
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