Archived from groups: alt.internet.wireless (More info?)
My home network basically looks like this:
optic fiber modem -> wireless router(802.11g) -> antenna -> 2 miles
open space -> antenna -> AP(802.11g) -> inhouse HUB -> AP(802.11b)
The inhouse hub connects to 3 PCs in the house, and the last 802.11b
AP is used for a wireless connection to a laptop in the kitchen. Is
this last 802.11b AP slowing down the entire network prohibiting
wireless 11g speeds?
Archived from groups: alt.internet.wireless (More info?)
In article <b9afd903.0408232211.23fdbafc@posting.google.com>,
Doiku <doiku@msn.com> wrote:
:The inhouse hub connects to 3 PCs in the house, and the last 802.11b
:AP is used for a wireless connection to a laptop in the kitchen. Is
:this last 802.11b AP slowing down the entire network prohibiting
:wireless 11g speeds?
Any AP that has *any* 802.11b clients associated will use an 802.11b
compatible carrier sense mechanism (slower than the usual 802.11b
mechanism, actually) rather than the sensors allowed in pure 802.11g
networks.
However, down the chain where the 802.11b device can't be seen
should run at full 11g speeds. And the slowdown doesn't apply
if there's just an 802.11b signal in the area, that is not Associated
with the 11g AP.
--
Positrons can be described as electrons traveling backwards in time.
Certainly many Usenet arguments about the past become clearer when they
are re-interpreted as uncertainty about the future.
-- Walter Roberson
Archived from groups: alt.internet.wireless (More info?)
I wonder if you might have an opinion. I'm really new to wireless.
With this 2-mile wireless setup to the modem, I'm getting about 2mb of
throughput on the internet. Should I be satisfied with that?
Should/could I be getting more speed?
Archived from groups: alt.internet.wireless (More info?)
"Doiku" <doiku@msn.com> wrote in message
news:b9afd903.0408240553.a10628b@posting.google.com...
> I wonder if you might have an opinion. I'm really new to wireless.
> With this 2-mile wireless setup to the modem, I'm getting about 2mb of
> throughput on the internet. Should I be satisfied with that?
Yes, that's OK for most Internet uses.
> Should/could I be getting more speed?
It depends on your ISP and the access way you are using.
Archived from groups: alt.internet.wireless (More info?)
I should have included in my previous email that a laptop sitting next
to the modem and connected to it via a 1 meter lan cable reads an
average throughput of 20mb.
Thanks for your help. After 5 years of an ISDN connection this 2mb
throughput is almost like nirvana.
You are about to answer a thread that has been inactive for more than 6 months. If you still wish to proceed, please ensure that your posting is original and does not duplicate or overlap any prior responses to this thread.