The next act? Faster throughput and greater range, but standards may need taming for enterprise networking.
Hackers are having a field day with unsecured wireless networks. Here's how to keep them from snooping around your company's wireless communications.
Now that wireless is becoming technologically and financially competitive with its wired equivalents, the strongest argument of all to cut the cable is convenience. New standards in speed make wireless networking a valid choice.
With interoperable products and a variety of form factors, wireless LANs are coming into the mainstream.
Pirate rollouts of wireless LANs are a growing problem for technology departments. With the growing demand for PDAs and wireless access, how can you combat this, and other, security issues? Experts advise creating a strong wireless policy.
Now that wireless is becoming technologically and financially competitive with its wired equivalents, the strongest argument of all to cut the cable is convenience. New standards in speed make wireless networking a valid choice.
With interoperable products and a variety of form factors, wireless LANs are coming into the mainstream.
WLANs continue to proliferate on corporate networks, yet there's still a lot of confusion over WLAN security measures and the various implementations of the 802.11 protocol.
The lower cost of components, coupled with a fast-maturing technology, is prompting many organisations and IT professionals to ask: “What is the cost of deploying a wireless LAN vs. a wired one?”
Wireless LANS, wifi or 802.11a & b--every IT professional has heard of these terms. But what sort of uptake is there in Australia?
The lower cost of components, coupled with a fast-maturing technology, is prompting many organisations and IT professionals to ask: “What is the cost of deploying a wireless LAN vs. a wired one?”
Wireless LANS, wifi or 802.11a & b--every IT professional has heard of these terms. But what sort of uptake is there in Australia?
You don't have to wait for wireless networking -- D-Link Systems' DWL-500 Wireless LAN PCI Card 11Mbps is available now, and it’s actually two products in one.
Australia is one of the few countries to approve for sale a wireless card touted as the most powerful wireless LAN card ever.
802.11i is currently nearing completion and it adds two main blocks of improvements, improved security for data in transit, and better control of who can use a network.
Apple drops iPhone NDA
A little more than six months after Apple initially offered its software development kit for the iPhone, the c… Watch it now
StartupCamp Melbourne: The review
Google should come clean on datacentres
US shows what OPEL could have been
Broadband speedtest
How fast is your Internet connection?
Calculate the speed here.
Superguide: Printers -- all you need to know
Looking to buy a printer? Our superguide rates the latest printers and shines a light into the industry.
Click here for more.
Storage and server superguide
Over the last decade the art of maintaining the datacentre of a large organisation has evolved into an art form.
Click here for more.