Wireless Fidelity

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Wi-Fi Technologies

description

MASTER~JAI

Transcript of Wireless Fidelity

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Wi-Fi Technologies

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JAI ~MCA

MCA~ (GGITS)

ROLL NO. 20

Wi-Fi

(Wireless-Fidelity) Technologies

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Wi-Fi Tech. Agenda Introduction Purpose Wi-Fi Alliance The Wi-Fi Technology Elements of a WI-FI Network How a Wi-Fi Network Works Wi-Fi Network Topologies Wi-Fi Configurations Wi-Fi Applications Wi-Fi Security Authentication Advantages & Disadvantages

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Intro.• Wireless Technology is an alternative to Wired

Technology, which is commonly used, for connecting devices in wireless mode.

• Wi-Fi (Wireless Fidelity) is a generic term that refers to the IEEE 802.11 communications standard for Wireless Local Area Networks (WLANs).

• Wi-Fi Network connect computers to each other, to the internet and to the wired network.

Wi-Fi works on physical and data link layer.

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PurposeThe purpose of Wi-Fi is to hide complexity

by enabling wireless access to applications and data, media and streams. The main aims of Wi-Fi are the following:

make access to information easier ensure compatibility and co-existence of

devices eliminate cabling and wiring eliminate switches, adapters, plugs, pins

and connectors

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Wi-Fi Alliance The Alliance promotes standards with the aim of

improving the interoperability of wireless local area network products based on the IEEE 802.11 standards. The Wi-Fi Alliance, a consortium of separate and independent companies, agrees on a set of common interoperable products based on the family of IEEE 802.11 standards.The Wi-Fi Alliance certifies products via a set of defined test-procedures to establish interoperability. The Wi-Fi Alliance initially complicated matters by stating that it actually stood for "Wireless Fidelity", as with the advertising slogan"The Standard for Wireless Fidelity", but later removed the phrase from their marketing.

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The Wi-Fi TechnologyWi-Fi Networks use Radio Technologies to

transmit & receive data at high speed:

• IEEE 802.11b• IEEE 802.11a• IEEE 802.11g• IEEE 802.11n

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IEEE 802.11b• Appear in late 1999• Operates at 2.4GHz radio spectrum• 11 Mbps (theoretical speed) - within 30 m

Range• 4-6 Mbps (actual speed)• 100 -150 feet range• Most popular, Least Expensive• Interference from mobile phones and

Bluetooth devices which can reduce the transmission speed.

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IEEE 802.11a• Introduced in 2001• Operates at 5 GHz (less popular) • 54 Mbps (theoretical speed)• 15-20 Mbps (Actual speed)• 50-75 feet range• More expensive• Not compatible with 802.11b

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IEEE 802.11g• Introduced in 2003• Combine the feature of both standards

(a,b)• 100-150 feet range• 54 Mbps Speed• 2.4 GHz radio frequencies• Compatible with ‘b’

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Elements of a WI-FI Network• Access Point (AP) - The AP is a wireless LAN

transceiver or “base station” that can connect one or many wireless devices simultaneously to the Internet.

• Wi-Fi cards - They accept the wireless signal and relay information.They can be internal and external.(e.g PCMCIA Card for Laptop and PCI Card for Desktop PC)

• Safeguards - Firewalls and anti-virus software protect networks from uninvited users and keep information secure.

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How a Wi-Fi Network Works• Basic concept is same as Walkie talkies.• A Wi-Fi hotspot is created by installing an access

point to an internet connection.• An access point acts as a base station. • When Wi-Fi enabled device encounters a hotspot

the device can then connect to that network wirelessly.

• A single access point can support up to 30 users and can function within a range of 100 up to 300 feet.

• Many access points can be connected to each other via Ethernet cables to create a single large network.

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Wi-Fi Network Topologies• AP-based topology (Infrastructure Mode)

• Peer-to-peer topology (Ad-hoc Mode)

• Point-to-multipoint bridge topology

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AP-based topology• The client communicate through Access Point. • BSA-RF coverage provided by an AP.• ESA-It consists of 2 or more BSA.• ESA cell includes 10-15% overlap to allow

roaming.

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Peer-to-peer topology

• AP is not required.• Client devices within

a cell can communicate directly with each other.

• It is useful for setting up of a wireless network quickly and easily.

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Point-to-multipoint bridge topology

This is used to connect a LAN in one building to a LANs in other buildings even if the buildings are miles apart. These conditions receive a clear line of sight between buildings. The line-of-sight range varies based on the type of wireless bridge and antenna used as well as the environmental conditions.

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Wi-Fi ConfigurationsWi-Fi is composed of three main sectors:

Home (individual residences and apartment buildings)

Public (Round about 70,000 “hotspots” through out the world.)

Enterprise (corporations, universities, office parks)

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Wi-Fi Configurations

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Wi-Fi Configurations

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Wi-Fi Configurations

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Employee Access

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Wi-Fi Applications• Home• Small Businesses or SOHO• Large Corporations & Campuses• Health Care• Wireless ISP (WISP)• Travellers

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Wi-Fi Security The requirements for Wi-Fi network

security can be broken down into two primary components:

• Authentication• Privacy

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Wi-Fi Security Techniques• Service Set Identifier (SSID)

• Wired Equivalent Privacy (WEP)

• 802.1X Access Control

• Wireless Protected Access (WPA)

• IEEE 802.11i

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Authentication

• Authentication Server is used• Username and password • Risk:

• Data (username & password) send before secure channel established

• Solution• Establishing a encrypted channel before

sending username and password

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Advantages• Mobility• Ease of Installation• Flexibility• Cost• Reliability• Security• Use unlicensed part of the radio spectrum• Roaming• Speed

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Limitations OR Disadvantages• Interference• Degradation in performance• High power consumption• Limited range

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