About Section
The About section of the Configuration Utility dialog box shows the regulatory domain: FCC
for US, ETSI for Europe, MKK for Japan; the MAC address and the release information of
both the device driver for the Wireless Adapter and the Wireless Configuration Utility software.
Click OK to continue, or select another tab.
Wireless Network Fundamentals
Wireless Network Configuration
Ad-Hoc Mode (Peer-to-Peer Workgroup)
The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) standard for wireless LANs
(WLANs), 802.11 offers two methods for configuring a wireless network — Ad-Hoc and
infrastructure. In an Ad-Hoc network, computers are brought together as needed; thus, there is
no structure or fixed points to the network — each node can generally communicate with any
other node. There is no Access Point involved in this configuration. It enables you to quickly
set up a small wireless workgroup and allows workgroup members to exchange data or share
printers as supported by Microsoft Networking in the various Windows operating systems.
Some vendors also refer to ad-hoc networking as peer-to-peer workgroup networking.
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To display Access Points around the working environment, select the Re-Scan button. In
addition to showing the MAC Address of each Access Point, you can also view the Channel,
Signal, Security, and Network Modes.
Click
OK to continue, or select another tab.
Statistics Section
The Statistics section of the Configuration Utility dialog box indicates the real-time Transmit and
Receive packets performance in graph form and also displays the performance statistics in figures.
Click OK to continue or select another tab.
This table describes the options available from the Statistics section:
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Statistics
Description
Transmit/Receive
Performance
Displays the maximum and current Tx/Rx (Kbits/sec) performance statistics.
Transmit/Receive
Statistics
Monitors the Tx/Rx of the Kbits or packet statistics.