Wireless Network Adapters; Recommended Cards; Recommended Access Points; Recommended Wireless Network Adapters - TANDBERG MXP F8 Administrator's Manual

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MXP
Contents
Introduction

Wireless Network Adapters

Many of TANDBERGs endpoints comes with a PCMCIA port where a
wireless card can be plugged in to make the system interface with a few
selected 802.11b wireless network cards.
The major drawback by using the PCMCIA interface to get a system
onto a wireless network is that the choice of usable cards is very limited,
this because of the inconvenience of having a wide specter of software
drivers installed or available for installation.
It has been a challenge to get support for the newer wireless cards on
the market because many of the chipset manufacturers for the cards
do not make their development code available in a format we can use.
Most offer Windows based development code and as many of you are
aware, we do not run Windows on our products.
An easy work-around for this limitation is to use a wireless network
adapter which makes the system believe it is connected by wire, as
normal.

Recommended cards

Compaq WL110 11 Mbps Wireless LAN
Lucent Orinoco 11 Mbit/s SILVER
Lucent Orinoco 11 Mbit/s GOLD
Cisco Aironet 350 series (AIR-PCM 350 series)
Enterasys Networks RoamAbout 802.11 DS High Rate
Melco Buffalo WLI-PCM-L11G

Recommended access points

Compaq WL410 base station
ASUS WL-330g Pocket Wireless Access Point
Macsense AeroPad Mini WUA-800 Network Adapter
D-Link DWL-G810
D14033.06—AUGUST 2010
Getting started
The menu structure
The settings library

Recommended Wireless Network Adapters

TANDBERG has tested some wireless network adapters.
A wireless network adapter is typically a small box connected to the
endpoint (in this case) by a regular network cable, and powered either
from a USB connector or from the net by an AC/DC-adapter.
An option is using an ASUS Pocket Wireless Access Point WL-330g,
which has been tested by TANDBERG. This device will work as an
Ethernet bridge by plugging the RJ45 from the codec into the device.
You can then power it from the USB port of the TANDBERG codec or
from a separate power brick.
ASUS WL-330g Pocket Wireless Access Point
Dimensions: 3.3in x 2.45in x 0.67in
Supports both 802.11b and 802.11g.
Models tested by TANDBERG includes
Aeropad Mini WUA-800
D-link DWL-G810
The adapters have basically exactly the same characteristics and
functions. The main difference is the size. The D-Link adapter is
about twice the size of the other two adapters which are more or less
identical. The D-Link adapter also comes only with a net-adapter for
power, whereas the other two have USB-adapters. The D-Link adapter
provides better coverage.
Using the system
Using the system
Physical interfaces
Peripheral equipment

Configuration

The adapter has to be configured from a PC to match the settings of the
wireless network it is supposed to connect to.
The wireless network adapters can usually be set as either an adapter
or as an access point.
The adapter is configured via a conventional html user interface from a
PC.
The PC NIC has to be set to a static IP-address in accordance to the
settings of the adapter.
Below you will find some typical settings for configuring a wireless
network adapter (the ones marked with '*' are mandatory):
AP Name: Unit Name
SSID*: Name on wireless network
Channel: Is provided automatically in adapter mode
Wireless Mode: (is usually infrastructure)
Authenthication*: Type of encryption
WEP Key*: WEP encryption On/Off for open systems
Mode*: Type of key (hex/ASCII)
Key(s)*: 1 - 4 keys
Administrator Guide
Appendices
Contact us
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