Website Maintenance Announcement – September 19–21
Activities begin at 6:00 PM CT on Friday, September 19 and continue through Sunday, September 21.
During this time, Product and My Product List functionality will be unavailable
Website Maintenance Announcement – September 19–21
Activities begin at 6:00 PM CT on Friday, September 19 and continue through Sunday, September 21.
During this time, Product and My Product List functionality will be unavailable
While the router physically connects to the wired network and Internet and manages data sent to your devices, the wireless access point connects to the router and broadcasts the network over radio frequency (RF) signals that your devices connect to. Interference, congested RF, and poor signal strength reduce service.
Wireless access points: what are they exactly? Like plumbing, most of us don’t really think about Wi-Fi—until it stops working. But that unassuming little box blinking away on your bookshelf—or café counter, or office ceiling—is doing some amazing things. Pull up a chair. It’s time for wireless access points 101.
The Wi-Fi networks we know and love all share some common components. First, there’s a router—the piece that physically connects to the wired network and Internet. Whenever you connect a device (your phone, laptop, smart TV), the router acts as postmaster for the network, making sure each data packet gets delivered to the right destination. Then, there’s the wireless access point. It broadcasts the network out over radio frequency (RF) signals, so wireless devices can connect over the air. In our home networks, we usually don’t have to worry about the different Wi-Fi components. If you’re using a “wireless gateway” from your Internet provider, you’ve got a router and wireless access point baked into one box. Bigger networks—like office buildings—break them out separately, with multiple access points extending the Wi-Fi over a larger space.
If you’ve spent any time on Wi-Fi, you know staying connected can sometimes be a pain. Why? Because keeping a strong, reliable signal is really hard. Those blinky little boxes are dealing with:
Don’t want to get into the gory details of RF technology? That’s OK. At Ruckus, we’re always thinking about what makes great Wi-Fi, so our customers don’t have to. Years of engineering, multiple groundbreaking patents, it all adds up to wireless access points that are like the pipes in your walls: they just work. Check out the full story on Ruckus’ industry-leading wireless access points.