On 21/08/10 12:09, g wrote: > On 08/21/2010 12:22 PM, Tim wrote: > <snip> > >> All your wireless devices transmit on the same channel. > yes and no. depends on manual assignment. > >> They just don't transmit at the same time as each other, they take turns. > true. first to transmit/first heard. > >> That's why wireless sucks as a networking medium, when you have quite a >> few devices in use on a network with a lot of traffic. > true. > >> With wired networking, through a switch or router, many devices can all >> talk simultaneously, if they're each talking to different devices. > again, yes and no. with a switch, yes. > > with a router, no. again, first to transmit/first heard. > > > as for wireless: > > simultaneously, different channels, true. > > simultaneously, same channel, not true, if all on same channel or thru a > router, there will be collision. this is why network interfaces have > collision detection. when collision is detected, a random delay is applied > before retransmit. > > if a switch or router has a multiplexing ability, then receive/retransmit > will be in an order. > > > for wireless, what is needed, if not already, is ability for each interface > to monitor in a delayed channel switch scan mode. > > when a signal is received, interface would listen for it's ip. if being > 'called', it then replies and communications are established. > > if interface needs to communicate, it would first scan for an open channel, > then send destination ip address and listen for reply. > > > later. > > i need to fondle my figs. > I believe they are "spread spectrum" devices which enables them to avoid mutual interference, not that I understand it but that's my impression. "Wi-Fi products use both single-carrier direct-sequence spread spectrum radio technology (part of the larger family of spread spectrum systems) and multi-carrier orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing (OFDM) radio technology. The deregulation of certain radio-frequencies[by whom?] for unlicensed spread spectrum deployment enabled the development of Wi-Fi products, Wi-Fi's onetime competitor HomeRF, Bluetooth, and many other products such as some types of cordless telephones." http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wi-Fi I need to buy a fig tree. And I am running the system on the Netgear WNDR3300 with DD-WRT installed. I'm still testing but so far the basics are working without a hitch!. Bob -- users mailing list users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe or change subscription options: https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/users Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Mailing_list_guidelines