- !Current projects
- | [Lemon] | Trying to "hack" the Gigabyte B49G Ap's its interesting. Putting together a page with the various [Terminology] |
- | TheRoDent| Messing about with Linksys WAP54G's and compiling tools for Lemon |
- | [Daffy] | Updating info in the Wiki, and trying to build a cheaper solution for nodes |
- | Node | This is a wireless point. Your house is generally a node, this is the spot where the wireless equipment has been setup.
+ | Node | This is a wireless point. Your house is generally a node, this is the spot where the wireless equipment has been setup.|
+ | Pigtail | It is a small cable that atatches between wither the Antenna and the AP or between the Antenna and the coaxial cable connected to the antenna.|
+ | AP | Access point. This is the actual device that connects your network to the wireless network.|
+ | LMR400 | This is the coaxial cable that is used to connect the AP to the Antenna. The LMR400 is actually a type of cable you get other cable aswell, LMR195 is another type of cable the difference being that the LMR400 has a loss of 0.2dB/m where LMR195 has a loss 0.6dB/m, so from this you can see that LMR400 is better than LMR195 and that having less cable is advised.|
+ | dB | a logarithmic unit of sound intensity; 10 times the logarithm of the ratio of the sound intensity to some reference intensity (I googled for that) Basically it is the Signal strength, high dB is GOOD! From the definition you can see that it is a logarithmic unit which means that the difference from 1 to 2 is HUGE so you want as little loss from your equipment as possible.|
+ | Signal Strength | This is the SNR value of your link, it is measured in dB's and the higher the number the better.|
+ | SNR | Signal to Noise Ratio, basically your signal strength is compared to the noise that you are recieving, the objective is to get a high SNR.|
+ If you have any more terms that you want explained or if you want to correct me please let e know, I am populating this from my own experience, I feel that a personal definition often explains more than the direct dictionary definition.--%%%