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Author
1 Sep 2006 7:30 PM
andy.lisowski
This question may sound ignorant, but I was thinking...

Let's say you have one of the new generation Wireless routers that has
a range 2-6x that of 802.11g.

   Bear in mind that I am not worried about speed at all.  Only range.


   Take a laptop that has a wireless card that is....802.11b, a rather
limited technology by your routers standards.

   Does the card have to be within 802.11b range of the router or can
it go as far away as a new generation card?  Is the range of the
wireless network dependant upon the signal given off by the router AND
the card, or just the router?  It would seem to me that if the router
could reach out and shake hands with the card, the range of the card
should matter.  It would be kind of like having the router come to you.


   I hope you understand what I am trying to ask.

Andy

Author
2 Sep 2006 6:10 AM
Jack (MVP-Networking).
Hi
In the middle of this page you would find functional comparison,
http://www.ezlan.net/Wireless_Hardware.html
Jack (MVP-Networking).

<andy.lisow***@gmail.com> wrote in message
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>
>
>   This question may sound ignorant, but I was thinking...
>
> Let's say you have one of the new generation Wireless routers that has
> a range 2-6x that of 802.11g.
>
>   Bear in mind that I am not worried about speed at all.  Only range.
>
>
>   Take a laptop that has a wireless card that is....802.11b, a rather
> limited technology by your routers standards.
>
>   Does the card have to be within 802.11b range of the router or can
> it go as far away as a new generation card?  Is the range of the
> wireless network dependant upon the signal given off by the router AND
> the card, or just the router?  It would seem to me that if the router
> could reach out and shake hands with the card, the range of the card
> should matter.  It would be kind of like having the router come to you.
>
>
>   I hope you understand what I am trying to ask.
>
> Andy
>