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Air Time
C O L U M N  
From the Mobile Observer:
Air Time: Wireless 101

  April 17, 2002
  By Dave Molta


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My early experiences in network management involved the administration of a broadband cable TV system that we used to handle campuswide data services. In those days, we used Sytek modems to provide 9600-bits-per- second terminal connections to DEC VAX and Unix hosts. We also used synchronous broadband modems to connect 3270 terminals via IBM 3174 cluster controllers. For higher speed services, we used the old 2-Mbps PC network and Ungerman-Bass buffered repeaters to interconnect Ethernet segments. So much for nostalgia.



Eventually, we went digital for everything and Ethernet over fiber essentially replaced the old broadband services. But those experiences working with analog modems paid off many years later as I ventured into wireless networks. All of a sudden, the work we used to do tuning the broadband system for proper signal and noise levels, as well as those basic skills with a spectrum analyzer, were relevant again.

These days, as many IT organizations begin to get their feet wet with wireless, they are realizing that they need to enhance their analog RF technology skills sets. Some are lucky enough to have one or two ham radio operators on staff, and while there is a little retraining involved when moving to advanced modulation schemes at gigahertz frequencies, these folks usually eat it up.

But what if you're not lucky enough to have someone with RF skills on staff? Then it's time to go back to school. Many take the tried-and-true approach of digging into manuals and reading books and whitepapers. For those of you who have minimal RF experience, I enthusiastically recommend Carl J. Weisman's "The Essential Guide to RF and Wireless" (Second Edition, Prentice-Hall, 2002). Weisman explains RF technology with a humorous style written for people who don't have engineering backgrounds.

I've found there is a glut of books on wireless networking these days, and most of the authors are guilty of over-stretching, trying to cover all areas -- even those where they don't have knowledge. Weisman doesn't try to do too much, but what he does, he does quite well. He explains the fundamentals of RF circuit design, major RF components, antenna designs and the practical aspects of a variety of wireless networks.

For those of you who want to focus in more depth on wireless LAN technology, give some thought to studying for certification as a CWNP (Certified Wireless Network Professional). This is a new certification program developed by Planet3 Wireless. The program is similar in many respects to Cisco certification programs, except that it is vendor neutral. The folks who put this program together have many years of field experience installing and maintaining wireless LANs.

My staff at the Center for Emerging Network Technologies (CENT) at Syracuse University has been evaluating the CWNP training materials, and we are quite impressed by both the breadth and depth. In fact, we're planning to put some graduate students through the training this summer. The program recently received a bit of a visibility boost when it was endorsed by WLANA (Wireless LAN Association), a nonprofit educational trade association dedicated to advancing knowledge in the wireless LAN industry.

Of course, if you are really brave, you can do it the old-fashion way: Read white papers. Read manuals. Read the tutorials available through IEEE. Then get your hands on as much wireless gear as you can, set it all up and then try to break it. Download the evaluation copy of Airopeek from Wild Packets and learn the data and management frame formats. You might be surprised at how much you can learn that way.

Check out some of the contents of Carl J. Weisman's "The Essential Guide to RF and Wireless" online for free on Amazon.com.
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/stores/detail/-/books/0130354651/reader/1/002-1646102-4324018#reader-link

Check out the CWNP Web site.
http://www.cwne.com/index.html

If you're looking for the latest mobile and wireless technologies, trends, and know-how, be sure to sign up for our free, weekly newsletter: Network Computing Mobile Observer. And, be sure to check out Network Computing's Mobile Observer site, your best source for timely information on everything mobile and wireless.

Send your comments on this column to Dave Molta at dmolta@nwc.com.







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