AP assisted roam, Cisco Centralized Key Management, radio measurements, and transmit power control | |
Roaming and real-time diagnostics, MFP, a diagnostic channel that allows troubleshooting of the client, client reporting, optional location service, and expedited bandwidth | |
WME, proxy ARP, EAP-FAST, and WPA2, and single sign-on | |
CAC, UPSD, voice metrics, MBSSIDs, location, link tests, and NAC | |
LEAP, WPA, 802.1x and VLANs per AP, TKIP, and WiFi |
HTTPS to the DHCP address. | |
HTTPS to 10.0.0.1. | |
HTTPS to the 192.168.1.1. | |
HTTP to 10.0.0.1. | |
HTTP to the DHCP address. | |
HTTP to 192.168.1.1. |
The IEEE and FCC are responsible for the standards that apply to wireless networks. The WiFi Alliance, ETSI, and TELEC are the governmental agencies that regulate compliance with local standards. | |
The IEEE and FCC are responsible for the Layer 3 protocol support and frequency and power- level regulations in the United States. ETSI and TELEC are responsible for frequency and power- level regulations in Europe and Japan. The WiFi Alliance is responsible to interoperability testing. | |
The IEEE is responsible for Layer 1 and Layer 2 protocols. The WiFi Alliance is responsible for interoperability testing. The FCC, ETSI, and TELEC are responsible for radio frequency and transmission power-level regulations and standards in the U.S., Europe, and Japan. | |
The IEEE is responsible for Layer 1 and Layer 2 protocols. The FCC, ETSI, and TELEC are responsible for interoperability testing and compliance. The WiFi Alliance is responsible for radio frequency and transmission power-level regulations and standards on a global basis. |