802.11 White Papers
How to Secure Your Wireless 802.11 Network
Overview This White Paper outlines the challenges and solutions available to protect your Wireless LAN. Wireless 802.11 LAN's and Internet access can be secured with the proper solutions and processes. Through encryption delivered via SSL or IPSec VPN, data can be secured as it is transmitted across the wireless network. Via the newly emerging category of SSL, applianced based solutions called Instant Private Web, your Wireless network can even be protected in less than a few hours. In addition to encryption, stronger access control delivered via smart cards, USB tokens or complex passwords needs to be in place to truly provide the next level of security. Extranet, email, Intranet and corporate data access can now be deployed via Wireless, learn more about how to secure it.
| Publisher | SafeNet | File Format | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Date Published | March 2003 | Downloads | 8 |
| Format | White Papers | ||
| Topics | |||
Frequency Hopping Spread Spectrum (FHSS) vs. Direct Sequence Spread Spectrum (DSSS) in Broadband Wireless Access (BWA) and Wireless LAN (WLAN)
This white paper explains the principles of the FHSS and DSSS radio technologies used in WLAN and BWA applications as well as the advantages and disadvantages of each one of...
The Effects of Adjacent Channel Rejection and Adjacent Channel Interference on 802.11 WLAN Performance
The escalating deployment of wireless networking technology as well as other wireless technologies in the same unlicensed spectrum is rapidly increasing the radio frequency (RF) interference for Wi-Fi (802.11) products,...
Introduction to IEEE 802.11b Wireless LAN
Advancements in wireless link intelligence enable self configuring and self-healing networks that are simple to deploy and adaptable to changing situations. These new technologies enable a new type of network...
Seven Security Problems of 802.11 Wireless
A common theme throughout this white paper of security problems is that the technological mechanisms to address many of the perceived flaws exist and are well understood, but they must...
Beyond the Site Survey: RF Spectrum Management for Wireless LANs
Our primary objective in the further development of wireless networks of any form today is to narrow, if not eliminate, the behavioral and performance differences that distinguishes wireless from wireline....



