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Chapter 5 - glossary – MITSUBISHI ELECTRIC A111 User Manual

Page 38

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A111 Wireless Card Adaptor

Chapter 5

Chapter 5 - Glossary

Glossary

DHCP (Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol)
This protocol allows a computer (or many computers on your network) to
be automatically assigned a single IP address from a DHCP server.

DNS Server Address (Domain Name System)

DNS allows Internet host computers to have a domain name and one or

more IP addresses. A DNS server keeps a database of host computers and

their respective domain names and IP addresses, so that when a user

enters a domain name into the Internet browser, the user is sent to the proper

IP address. The DNS server address used by the computers on your home

network is the location of the DNS server your ISP has assigned.

DSL Modem (Digital Subscriber Line)

A DSL modem uses your existing phone lines to transmit data at high speeds.

Direct-Sequence Spread Spectrum (for 802.11b)

Spread spectrum (broadband) uses a narrowband signal to spread the

transmission over a segment of the radio frequency band or spectrum. Direct-

sequence is a spread spectrum technique where the transmitted signal is

spread over a particular frequency range.
Direct-sequence systems communicate by continuously transmitting a

redundant pattern of bits called a chipping sequence. Each bit of transmitted

data is mapped into chips and rearranged into a pseudorandom spreading

code to form the chipping sequence. The chipping sequence is combined

with a transmitted data stream to produce the output signal.
Wireless mobile clients receiving a direct-sequence transmission use the

spreading code to map the chips within the chipping sequence back into bits

to recreate the original data transmitted by the wireless device. Intercepting

and decoding a direct-sequence transmission requires a predefined

algorithm to associate the spreading code used by the transmitting wireless

device to the receiving wireless mobile client.
This algorithm is established by IEEE 802.11b specifications. The bit redundancy within

the chipping sequence enables the receiving wireless mobile client to recreate the original

data pattern, even if bits in the chipping sequence are corrupted by interference. The

ratio of chips per bit is called the spreading ratio. A high spreading ratio increases the

resistance of the signal to interference. A low spreading ratio increases the bandwidth

available to the user. The wireless device uses a constant chip rate of 11Mchips/s for all

data rates, but uses different modulation schemes to encode more bits per chip at the

higher data rates. The wireless device is capable of an 11 Mbps data transmission rate,

but the coverage area is less than a 1 or 2 Mbps wireless device since coverage area

decreases as bandwidth increases.