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Another great place to shop for Ghz Only products is Amazon. They have more than just books! Here are some more information for Ghz Only: The following describes the current defined wireless protocol standards. 802.11a This standard was approved in 1999 with the IEEE committee. It specifies a maximum data rate of 54 Mbps using 5.15 GHz - 5.35 GHz and 5.725 GHz - 5.825 GHz unlicensed bands in the United States. The advantage of 802.11a is higher throughput however the cell coverage is smaller and additional access points will be needed. There is much less interference from devices such as cell phones, microwaves and commercial devices using the 2.4 GHz band. There are 23 non-overlapping channels with the current 802.11h specification. Some Cisco devices support both 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz transmitters on the same access point. The modulation scheme used with 802.11a is OFDM which is effective, allowing higher data rates and minimizes affects of interference. An advantage of 802.11a is the continued deployment around the world however each country specifies number of channels and frequencies with the 5 GHz band. It is a good practice to separate neighbor channels with non-neighbor assignments. 80.11b This standard was approved in 1999 with the IEEE committee. It specifies a maximum data rate of 11 Mbps using the 2.412 GHz - 2.484 GHz unlicensed band in the United States. That band experiences a lot of interference from commercial devices using that frequency. The standard in the United States specifies 11 channels with a bandwidth of around 80 MHz at 5 MHz per channel. The United States allocates 3 non-overlapping channels of 1, 6 and 11 with center frequency separation of 25 MHz per channel. The modulation scheme used with 802.11b is Direct Sequence Spread Spectrum (DSSS) with CCK which has characteristics that minimize affects associated with interference. 802.11b transmit speeds include 1, 2, 5.5 and 11 Mbps. 802.11g This standard was approved in 2003 with the IEEE committee. It specifies a maximum data rate of 54 Mbps using the same 2.4 GHz band as 802.11b. The 802.11g standard is most popular around the United States with high throughput, increased coverage and less cost. The same interference occurs however with the 2.4 GHz band. The 802.11g is compatible with 802.11b standard and assigns the same 11 channels with 1, 6 and 11 as non-overlapping. The modulation scheme used with 802.11g is OFDM with higher data rates specified. 802.11g specification has transmit speeds including 6, 9, 12, 18, 24, 36 and 48 Mbps. 802.16 This is a wireless standard focused on MAN implementations allowing home and office seamless wireless access from devices anywhere across a metropolitan city with line of sight distances of around 27 miles and speeds of 120 Mbps. The point to multipoint specification operates in the 10 - 66 GHz range. There is an 802.16a specification with mesh topologies and non line of sight that describes frequencies from the licensed and unlicensed 2 GHz and 11 GHz band at a speed of 70 Mbps. The key issue with any MAN implementation and all fixed wireless has to do with interference and frequency your equipment is assigned. The unlicensed frequencies will of course be vulnerable to interference from similar devices across the city. 802.11n This new standard specifies faster rates of 600 Mbps between access points and 1000 Mbps from access point to network switch increasing throughput from the current 100 Mbps. WiFi Alliance Forum Tests and certifies manufacturer wireless products for conformity with specific wireless standards. Devices that have been certified interoperable can be deployed in mixed multi vendor environments. Cisco Wireless Network Design Guide available at amazon.com and eBookmall.com Shaun Hummel is an author of various technical books and has a web site focused on information technology job search solutions and certifications. http://www.networkjobsolutions.com About the Author Shaun Hummel, CCNP, is a Senior Network Engineer with 11 years experience in enterprise network planning, design, and implementation. He has worked for various private and public companies in Canada and the United States improving infrastructure, security, and management. He has written Network Planning and Design Guide, Cisco Wireless Network Design Guide and Network Assessment Guide. www.networkjobsolutions.com Can my laptop play sims 3 if it only has 1.2 GHz when its supposed to have 2.0 GHz? Here is my system power Manufacturer: Acer Model: Aspire 5534 Processor: AMD Athlon(tm) X2 Dual Core Processor L310 1.2 GHz Installed memory (RAM): 4.00 GB (3.75 GB usable) System type: 64-bit Operating System
I don't think it would. Even if it does, it'd be pretty slow. Why don't you check here if your laptop can handle the game or not. If the laptop passes the minimum requirements and the result bar is green, you can run the game, albeit at low settings. http://cyri.systemrequirementslab.com/srtest/ Mass Effect 2 PC review Thanks for visiting!
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Wireless Network Standards - 802.11a, 802.11b, 802.11g, 802.16, 802.11n
Publisher: Electronic Arts Developer: BioWare System requirements: Windows XP SP3/Vista SP1/Win 7, 1.8 GHz Intel Core2Duo or equivalent CPU, 1 GB RAM for Win XP/2GB for Vista or Win 7, 256 MB graphics card with Pixel Shader 3.0 support, DirectX 9.0c-compatible sound card, 15 GB hard-drive space, DirectX 9.0c August 2008 Genre: RPG Release date: Available now In the gaming [...]

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