Wireless Standards
802.11b Speed
11 Megabits per second
802.11b Miscellaneous
14 channels,11 used in the in US; Interference-laden
802.11g Miscellaneous
14 channels,11 used in the in US; Interference-laden
802.11n Miscellaneous
14 channels,11 used in the in US; Interference-laden
802.11n Frequency & range
2.4 and 5 GHz; 300 ft+ range;
802.11b Frequency & range
2.4GHz; 300 ft range;
802.11g Frequency & range
2.4GHz; 300 ft range;
802.11a speed
54 Megabits per second
802.11g Speed
54 Megabits per seconds
802.11a Frequency & range
5GHz; 150 ft. range;
802.11a Miscellaneous
8 usable channels. Consumer-disallowed; origininally intended as a model.
What encryption protocol is commonly used today?
The current wireless encryption standard is WPA2, which uses a form of AES, along with CCMP (Counter Cipher Mode with Block Chaining Message Authentication Code Protocol).
What are the different versions of WPA?
The first was WPA-PSK, or Pre-Shared Key. The next was WPA-TKIP, or Temporal Key Integrity Protocol. This was followed by WPA-AES, or Advanced Encryption Standard.
802.11n Speed
Up to 600 Megabits per second
What replaced WEP?
WEP was replaced by WPA, or WiFi Protected Access.
What was the original wireless encryption used?
WEP, or Wired Equivalent Privacy. Because of its inherent weaknesses, WEP was officially retired in 2004.