Appendix D: Glossary - Planet WDAP-C3000AX User Manual

Hide thumbs Also See for WDAP-C3000AX:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

User Manual of WDAP-C3000AX &WDAP-3000AX

Appendix D: Glossary

802.11ax - 802.11ax is a wireless networking standard in the 802.11 family by adding OFDMA,
MU-MIMO (which is marketed under the brand name Wi-Fi 6), developed in the IEEE Standards
Association process, providing high-throughput wireless local area networks (WLANs) on the 5GHz
band 20、40、80、160MHz.
802.11ac - 802.11ac is a wireless networking standard in the 802.11 family by adding MU-MIMO (which
is marketed under the brand name Wi-Fi 5), developed in the IEEE Standards Association process,
providing high-throughput wireless local area networks (WLANs) on the 5GHz band.
802.11n - 802.11n builds upon previous 802.11 standards by adding MIMO (multiple-input
multiple-output). MIMO uses multiple transmitter and receiver antennas to allow for increased data
throughput via spatial multiplexing and increased range by exploiting the spatial diversity, perhaps
through coding schemes like Alamouti coding. The Enhanced Wireless Consortium (EWC) [3] was
formed to help accelerate the IEEE 802.11n development process and promote a technology
specification for interoperability of next-generation wireless local area networking (WLAN) products.
802.11a - 802.11a was an amendment to the IEEE 802.11 wireless local network specifications that
defined requirements for an orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM) communication system.
It was originally designed to support wireless communication in the unlicensed national information
infrastructure (U-NII) bands (in the 5–6 GHz frequency range) as regulated in the United States by the
Code of Federal Regulations, Title 47, Section 15.407.
802.11b - The 802.11b standard specifies a wireless networking at 11 Mbps using direct-sequence
spread-spectrum (DSSS) technology and operating in the unlicensed radio spectrum at 2.4GHzHz, and
WEP encryption for security. 802.11b networks are also referred to as Wi-Fi networks.
802.11g - specification for wireless networking at 54 Mbps using direct-sequence spread-spectrum
(DSSS) technology, using OFDM modulation and operating in the unlicensed radio spectrum at
2.4GHzHz, and backward compatibility with IEEE 802.11b devices, and WEP encryption for security.
DDNS (Dynamic Domain Name System) - The capability of assigning a fixed host and domain name to
a dynamic Internet IP Address.
DHCP (Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol) - A protocol that automatically configure the TCP/IP
parameters for the all the PC(s) that are connected to a DHCP server.
DMZ (Demilitarized Zone) - A Demilitarized Zone allows one local host to be exposed to the Internet for
a special-purpose service such as Internet gaming or videoconferencing.
DNS (Domain Name System) - An Internet Service that translates the names of websites into IP
addresses.
Domain Name - A descriptive name for an address or group of addresses on the Internet.
DSL (Digital Subscriber Line) - A technology that allows data to be sent or received over existing
traditional phone lines.
MTU (Maximum Transmission Unit) - The size in bytes of the largest packet that can be transmitted.
- 121 -

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

This manual is also suitable for:

Wdap-3000ax

Table of Contents