Bit Rate
The measurement of how much data is transmitted in a
given amount of time from one location to another.
Radio Mode
Use of 802.11a/b/g/n frequncies and data rates when
interacting with an AP, or the use of ad hoc to associate
to a station radio.
throughput. It is recommended when
AC power is in use.
Maximum
In Max Power Savings (Max PSP)
mode,
incoming messages for the radio,
which
connects to the access point to see if
any buffered messages are waiting.
The radio requests buffered messages
and then goes back to sleep. It
conserves the most power but offers
the
recommended when battery power is
in use.
Fast
Power Save Mode (Fast PSP) switches
between the two modes described
above, depending on network traffic.
This mode switches to CAM when
retrieving a large number of packets
and switches back to PSP (= Power
Save Polling) after the packets have
been retrieved. It is recommended
when power consumption is a concern
but you need greater throughput than
that allowed by Max PSP.
Default: Fast
Value: Auto (rate is negotiated automatically with the
AP)
Default: Auto
Value: B rates only, BG rates full, G rates only, BG
LRS, A rates only, ABG rates full, BGA rates full, Ad
Hoc
B rates
1, 2, 5.5, and 11 Mbps.
only
BG rates
All B and G rates, plus N rates if
full
supported.
G rates
6, 9, 12, 18, 24, 36, 48, and 54
only
Mbps.
BG LRS
1, 2, 5.5, 6, 11, 24, 36, and 54 Mbps.
This should only be used with Cisco
APs running IOS in autonomous mode
(without controllers).
Chapter 4 Using 802.11 Radio
the
access
point
wakes
up
periodically
lowest
throughput.
buffers
and
It
is
79
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