User's Manual

IEEE 802.11b
When the 802.11b module is installed, the terminal can easily connect to legacy
networks through access points (APs). Roaming among different networks is possible.
IEEE 802.11b is an industrial standard for Wireless Local Area Networking (WLAN),
which enables wireless communications over a long distance.
The speed of connection between two wireless devices will vary with range and signal
quality. To maintain a reliable connection, the 802.11b system automatically fallback
from 11 Mbps to 5.5, 2 or 1 Mbps as range increases or signal quality decreases.
An 802.11b network can operate in the following two modes:
Infrastructure mode - Wireless devices can communicate with each other or can
communicate with wired networks through APs.
Ad-hoc mode - Wireless devices or stations can communicate directly to each other,
without the use of APs.
802.11b Specification
Frequency Range: 2.4 ~ 2.483 GHz
Modulation: DSSS with DBPSK (1 Mbps), DQPSK (2 Mbps), CCK
Protocols: IP/TCP/UDP
Maximum Output Power: 100 mW
Data rate: 11, 5.5, 2, 1 Mbps auto-fallback
Coverage: 250 meters line-of-sight
Connected devices: Peer-to-Peer (no access point)
Server-to-Client (access point required)
Standard: IEEE 802.11b, interoperable with Wi-Fi devices