Search /
Docfinder:
Advanced search  |  Help  |  Site map
RESEARCH CENTERS
SITE RESOURCES
Click for Layer 8! No, really, click NOW!
Networking for Small Business
Wireless/Mobile /

Do we need AP interoperability?

Related linksToday's breaking news
Send to a friendFeedback

Sign up to receive this and other networking newsletters in your inbox.

It remains to be seen how the majority of wireless LAN infrastructures will be deployed in mainstream corporate offices. Will they emerge in a carefully managed, top-down approach championed by IT departments or as a bottom-up effort driven by business units?

In organizations where at least some degree of distributed purchasing decisions are made, access points (AP) from multiple vendors will likely creep into the mix, creating a degree of heterogeneity among the wireless network segment. In such cases, there might be more of a need than initially expected for a much-ignored IEEE 802.11 initiative called 802.11f.

The wireless LAN system vendor bigwigs tend to be dismissive of this emerging 802.11 standard. As one of the lesser-known ingredients in the alphabet soup of 802.11 wireless LAN specifications, 802.11f describes inter-AP communications among multivendor systems. " Why do you need it? " scoffed one Cisco wireless LAN marketing executive at a recent Wireless Communications Alliance meeting in Cupertino, Calif.

If you stick with one wireless LAN AP vendor exclusively, you don't. And that's what the big wireless LAN system vendors are betting on. Frankly, what with wireless being as tricky as it is, a single AP approach is indeed a good way to go, if you can manage it.

However, at the end of the day, even the biggest IT control freak can exert only so much power over thousands of employees. And company mergers and acquisitions will always play a role in disparate technologies coming together. So it's inevitable that somebody will eventually need 802.11f.

This technology handles the registration of APs within a network and the exchange of information when a user is roaming among coverage areas supported by different vendors' APs.  It will help with fast hand-off from AP to AP. The standard is expected to be final by the end of the year, and 802.11f-compliant products are expected in the first half of 2003.

RELATED LINKS

802.11f Task Group status

Wireless Communications Alliance

Joanie Wexler is an independent networking technology writer/editor in Campbell, Calif., who has spent most of her career analyzing trends and news in the computer networking industry. She welcomes your comments on the articles published in this newsletter, as well as your ideas for future article topics. Reach her at joanie@jwexler.com.

Network World Wireless archive
Past newsletters.


NWFusion offers more than 40 FREE technology-specific email newsletters in key network technology areas such as NSM, VPNs, Convergence, Security and more.
Click here to sign up!
New Event - WANs: Optimizing Your Network Now.
Hear from the experts about the innovations that are already starting to shake up the WAN world. Free Network World Technology Tour and Expo in Dallas, San Francisco, Washington DC, and New York.
Attend FREE
Your FREE Network World subscription will also include breaking news and information on wireless, storage, infrastructure, carriers and SPs, enterprise applications, videoconferencing, plus product reviews, technology insiders, management surveys and technology updates - GET IT NOW.
* HOME    * RESEARCH CENTERS     * NEWS     * EVENTS

Contact us | Terms of Service/Privacy | How to Advertise
Reprints and links | Partnerships | Subscribe to NW
About Network World, Inc.

Copyright, 1994-2006 Network World, Inc. All rights reserved.