Wi-Fi

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The use of Wi-Fi has boomed in recent years and is supported by a multitude of different devices. Laptops. game consoles, smartphones, printers and other peripherals usually have Wi-Fi certification.  
The use of Wi-Fi has boomed in recent years and is supported by a multitude of different devices. Laptops. game consoles, smartphones, printers and other peripherals usually have Wi-Fi certification.  
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==Dir==
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===Sub 1s===
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===Sub 2s===
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==SDirs==
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==References==
==References==
# Comer, D. E. (2006). Wi-Fi. ''Internetworking with TCP/IP'' (Fifth ed., pp. 419-441). Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson Prentice Hall.
# Comer, D. E. (2006). Wi-Fi. ''Internetworking with TCP/IP'' (Fifth ed., pp. 419-441). Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson Prentice Hall.

Revision as of 03:58, 10 April 2009

Wi-Fi logo

Wi-Fi is a consortium that verifies 802.11b wireless network products interoperate, and a marketing term vendors use to sell their products.[1]

The Wi-Fi alliance is a trade group that owns the 'Wi-Fi' trademark, a symbol that certifies interoperability between wireless devices. Not every Internet product is Wi-Fi certified however, and there exists many devices that are able to interoperate wirelessly without the Wi-Fi logo. Some products have chosen to omit having Wi-Fi certification to avoid paying certification costs.

The use of Wi-Fi has boomed in recent years and is supported by a multitude of different devices. Laptops. game consoles, smartphones, printers and other peripherals usually have Wi-Fi certification.

Contents

Dir

Sub 1s

Sub 2s

SDirs

References

  1. Comer, D. E. (2006). Wi-Fi. Internetworking with TCP/IP (Fifth ed., pp. 419-441). Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson Prentice Hall.
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