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Home Wireless LAN Applications PDF Print E-mail
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Written by Jim Geier   
Wednesday, 14 March 2007

For years, wireless LANs having been supporting enterprise applications, such as warehouse management and mobile users in offices. With lower prices and stable standards, homeowners are now starting to install wireless LANs at a rapid pace. The sharp increase in advertising seen on T.V. and retail store ads for Wi-Fi networking is definitely promoting this trend.

 

Wireless LANs the Easiest to Install
It’s much easier to install a wireless LAN at home as compared to a wired network. A typical homeowner won’t consider running cables throughout the house. It’s time consuming and requires stringing wires through the walls, which can be tricky and frustrating.

The installation of a wireless system, however, only requires the connection of a wireless LAN router to the broadband modem and the installation of wireless LAN cards in the laptops and PCs (if they don’t already have them). This can be done in less than an hour, and you’re ready to start networking. Thus, the installation of a wireless LAN at home is much faster and easier, which is why wireless in homes is flourishing.


Flexible Access Makes Life Easier
With a wireless LAN, employees can bring laptops home from work and continue working just as they do from their offices. For many professions, this makes it possible for people to work from home more effectively, whether it’s to spend a few more hours researching stuff on the Internet or enable telecommuting on a daily basis.

Of course with a wireless laptop, you truly can work from any place in the house. There’s nothing tying you down to a desk in a particular room. You’re free to use the Internet or access files on other computers while relaxing in a comfy chair in front of a T.V., lounging on the patio breathing fresh air, or sitting at a desk in a quite bedroom – just like you see in the commercials on T.V.!

As an independent consultant, I do much of my work from home. Without any defined work hours (a good thing), I tend to work off and on from morning to late evening (a bad thing). With this type of work schedule, I like the idea of working in the presence of family, which enables me to socialize a bit despite my work habits. With my wireless laptop, I can easily go back and forth to work. Of course this takes some practice because it’s nature to procrastinate and spend too much time socializing.

Wireless LANs at home are good for PCs as well. Unlike companies, Ethernet cabling in homes is nearly non-existent. That makes wireless is the best way to connect stationary PCs to the network. You’ll have much more flexibility in locating a PC to any part of the house without being near the broadband modem.


Internet Connection Sharing
Many homes now have more than one computer. After purchasing a new PC, homeowners will generally hold on to the older PC. It may not be the best for running some of the newer games, but it still offers a good station for browsing the web and interacting with email. Of course some people will also bring a laptop home from work or purchase one instead of upgrading to a newer PC.

With multiple computers, it’s extremely beneficial to have them interface to the same broadband connection. Because of the ease of installation, a wireless LAN is the best solution for sharing the Internet service. The days of dial-up are over! Just be sure to install a wireless LAN router (not an access point) to ensure that you have Network Address Translation (NAT) and Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) services necessary for all of the computers to share a single official IP address supplied by your Internet service provider.


Printer Sharing Increases Usability
Without a wireless LAN, most home users must cable their printer directly to a PC or the Ethernet connector on the broadband modem. This limits the number of places that the printer can reside. Generally, it must sit within a few feet of the PC or modem.

A wireless LAN print server, however, enables the printer to be accessible from over the wireless LAN. This makes printer placement extremely flexible. For example, you may find it most useful to have the printer in the family room where you do most of your laptop computing. Or, it might make more sense to have the printer just inside the door that leads to your patio. You can also easily move the printer to new locations when ever you want to.

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