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Wireless Standards in Europe (G, super G, B , A ) ???
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| JM |
excuse my ignorance. or lack of time to research this.
is the Wireless standard for wireless internet the same in Europe as in the States??? as in 802.11g/b/a ...
i'm assuming so, so i probably answered my own question here, cos i can't see a reason for it being anything different...
ugh. i don't want to post this but i will :p
>JM<
ps. last time i went, i was in Croatia, and they barely had DSL there.... so yeah... |
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| Yan |
That's the case.
Some parts of Europe (hard to find) already have WiMax (and maybe even WiBro)... But I'm not sure that's too important for you. |
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| gehzumteufel |
| IEEE standards are just that...standards. not country specific at all. the IEEE is a worldwide standards body. |
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| kadomony |
802.11 N
is where it's at |
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| Allied Nations |
| nowadays ull find b and g most places, and most g networks seem to allow b access.. but not all. |
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| djkoolaide |
| quote: | Originally posted by kadomony
802.11 N
is where it's at |
The Pre-N stuff we're seeing is nice, but as much as I'm a Linksys fan, I absolutely ing hate that Linksys N router. Its backward compatibility sucks donkey balls, so you have to be using all N cards as well if you want good performance. Tried it with my Linksys G cards (in two separate computers) and barely got a connection. Hooked up my SRX200 router again and boom, 90-95% signal on both computers. |
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| jdat |
Good luck finding open hot spots in Europe!
There are tons everywhere in trainstations, airports etc but they tend to be operated by phone operators who want you to have an outrageously priced access plan ( just like T-Mobile and the wifi crap they pull at Borders book stores in the Us and Starbucks too ( or perhaps it's someone else that operates wifi Starbucks ). |
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| SlickT |
| europe is pretty much the same as north america. japan has j which i believe is their version of g |
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