CCNA Wireless Practice Test Results

Question 1
42% answer correctly
You have an Apple IOS iPhone4 that is used on your home Wi-Fi network and a personal laptop that is used on your work’s enterprise wireless network. At your office, you are unable to see the enterprise wireless network on your iPhone4. What is the most likely cause of this issue?
Wi-Fi must be enabled on the client.
The enterprise is 2.4 GHz only.
The RF channel must be adjusted on the client.
WPA2 must be enabled on the client.
A new profile must be created on the client.
WPA2 CPU intensive encryption is not supported on the client.
The enterprise is 5 GHz only.
Question 2
28% answer correctly
A WLAN deployment uses a combination of Cisco Aironet 1260 APs and multiple Cisco 5500 Wireless LAN Controllers to provide wireless LAN access to end-users. The network administrator has decided to use DHCP Option 43 to enable the APs to discover the wireless LAN controllers. When configuring the DHCP scope, which format should be used for the Cisco WLC addresses?
A comma-separated ASCII string of Cisco WLC virtual IP addresses
A hexadecimal string of Cisco WLC virtual IP addresses
A hexadecimal string of Cisco WLC AP-manager addresses
A hexadecimal string of Cisco WLC management addresses
A comma-separated ASCII string of Cisco WLC management addresses
A comma-separated ASCII string of Cisco WLC AP-manager addresses
Question 3
42% answer correctly
What is the difference between the IEEE, the WiFi Alliance, and the FCC, ETSI, and TELEC?
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.
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 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.