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wifi in notebook, wifi in cell

2007-02-23 22:41:13 · 8 answers · asked by kanangisrinivas 5 in Computers & Internet Internet

8 answers

Wireless Fidelity.

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2007-02-23 22:55:31 · answer #1 · answered by vs b 2 · 1 0

WIFI is the abbreviated word for Wireless Fidelity. Aryan Explain it all.

2007-02-24 06:58:55 · answer #2 · answered by briggs 5 · 0 0

It's called Wireless Fidelity

2007-02-24 06:46:58 · answer #3 · answered by James Kevin 3 · 1 0

Wi-Fi is a brand originally licensed by the Wi-Fi Alliance to describe the underlying technology of wireless local area networks (WLAN) based on the IEEE 802.11 specifications. It was developed to be used for mobile computing devices, such as laptops, in LANs, but is now increasingly used for more services, including Internet and VoIP phone access, gaming, and basic connectivity of consumer electronics such as televisions and DVD players, or digital cameras. More standards are in development that will allow Wi-Fi to be used by cars in highways in support of an Intelligent Transportation System to increase safety, gather statistics, and enable mobile commerce Wi-Fi and the Wi-Fi CERTIFIED logo are registered trademarks of the Wi-Fi Alliance - the trade organization that tests and certifies equipment compliance with the 802.11x standards.

A typical Wi-Fi setup contains one or more Access Points (APs) and one or more clients. An AP broadcasts its SSID (Service Set Identifier, "Network name") via packets that are called beacons, which are usually broadcast every 100 ms. The beacons are transmitted at 1 Mbit/s, and are of relatively short duration and therefore do not have a significant effect on performance. Since 1 Mbit/s is the lowest rate of Wi-Fi it assures that the client who receives the beacon can communicate at at least 1 Mbit/s. Based on the settings (e.g. the SSID), the client may decide whether to connect to an AP. If two APs of the same SSID are in range of the client, the client firmware might use signal strength to decide which of the two APs to make a connection to. The Wi-Fi standard leaves connection criteria and roaming totally open to the client. This is a strength of Wi-Fi, but also means that one wireless adapter may perform substantially better than another. Since Wi-Fi transmits in the air, it has the same properties as a non-switched wired Ethernet network, and therefore collisions can occur. Unlike a wired Ethernet, and like most packet radios, Wi-Fi cannot do collision detection, and instead uses a packet exchange (RTS/CTS used for Collision Avoidance or CA) to try to avoid collisions.'

2007-02-24 06:53:23 · answer #4 · answered by Aryan 1 · 1 0

Wireless Fidelity.

However, I question whether the term "fidelity" should be used for sound played on a mobile phone or laptop, as it is far from quality.

2007-02-24 06:49:15 · answer #5 · answered by Mighty C 5 · 0 0

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2007-02-24 06:47:24 · answer #6 · answered by Tiger 3 · 1 0

wi-fi
it is stand for wireless fidelity
it is so related with wireless laaaand networking that allow u share network with agroup via wireless technology

2007-02-24 06:50:49 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

wireless

2007-02-24 06:45:30 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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