G
Guest
We have recently deployed several wireless networks into existing Windows 2000 environments
We have found, despite trying several different brands of equipment, that we cannot get the connection to remain solid for any length of time. It will frequently experience dropouts of a second or two, which is enough to cause crashing of DOS-based applications run across the network
Furthermore, throughput on these networksis abysmal. Despite showing very strong connection signals (even with the devices 2M apart in line of sight), we measure only a fraction of the rated throughput. An 11Mbit (b) router and matching PCI card managed only 0.25Mbit/sec sustained throughput, while a 56Mbit (g) router and matching PCI card scored a measly 7Mbit sustained
Is Wireless networking just simply not what it is advertised to be
Are these constant brief drop-outs normal, or are we missing something basic
Should we be getting somewhere CLOSE to the rated throughput? Even half? Even quarter
TIA.
We have found, despite trying several different brands of equipment, that we cannot get the connection to remain solid for any length of time. It will frequently experience dropouts of a second or two, which is enough to cause crashing of DOS-based applications run across the network
Furthermore, throughput on these networksis abysmal. Despite showing very strong connection signals (even with the devices 2M apart in line of sight), we measure only a fraction of the rated throughput. An 11Mbit (b) router and matching PCI card managed only 0.25Mbit/sec sustained throughput, while a 56Mbit (g) router and matching PCI card scored a measly 7Mbit sustained
Is Wireless networking just simply not what it is advertised to be
Are these constant brief drop-outs normal, or are we missing something basic
Should we be getting somewhere CLOSE to the rated throughput? Even half? Even quarter
TIA.