System Requirements; Key Features And Standards; Supported Standards And Conventions - NETGEAR ProSafe Premium WNDAP660 Reference Manual

Prosafe premium 3 x 3 dual-band wireless-n access point
Hide thumbs Also See for ProSafe Premium WNDAP660:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

ProSafe Premium 3 x 3 Dual-Band Wireless-N Access Point WNDAP660

System Requirements

Before installing the wireless access point, make sure that your system meets these
requirements:
A 10/100/1000 Mbps local area network device such as a hub or switch
The Category 5 UTP straight-through Ethernet cable with RJ-45 connector included in the
package, or one like it
A 100–120V, 50–60 Hz AC power source
A computer with the TCP/IP protocol installed and a web browser for configuration, such
as Microsoft Internet Explorer 6.0 or later, or Mozilla 1.5 or later
An 802.11a/n- or 802.11b/g/n-compliant device, such as the NETGEAR N600 Wireless-N
Dual Band USB Adapter (WNDA3100)

Key Features and Standards

Supported Standards and Conventions

Key Features
802.11b/g/n and 802.11a/n Standards–Based Wireless Networking
Autosensing Ethernet Connections with Auto Uplink
The wireless access point is easy to use and provides solid wireless and networking support.
It also offers a wide range of security options.
Supported Standards and Conventions
The wireless access point supports the following standards and conventions:
Standards compliance. The wireless access point complies with the IEEE 802.11a/b/g
standards for wireless LANs and is Wi-Fi certified for 802.11n standard.
WPA and WPA2. The wireless access point provides WPA and WPA2 enterprise-class
strong security with RADIUS and certificate authentication as well as dynamic encryption
key generation. The WPA-PSK and WPA2-PSK pre-shared key authentication does not
have the overhead of RADIUS servers but provides the strong security of WPA.
Multiple BSSIDs. The wireless access point supports multiple BSSIDs. When a wireless
access point is connected to a wired network and a set of wireless stations, it is called a
basic service set (BSS). The basic service set identifier (BSSID) is a unique identifier
attached to the header of packets sent over a WLAN that differentiates one WLAN from
another when a mobile device tries to connect to the network.
The multiple BSSID feature allows you to configure up to 16 SSIDs (8 per radio) on your
wireless access point and assign different configuration settings to each SSID. All the
configured SSIDs are active, and the network devices can connect to the wireless access
point by using any of these SSIDs.
Introduction
8

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents