A Field Guide To Wireless LANs for Administrators and Power Users
This book starts out an excellent historical overview of the evolution of local area networks and the migration of TCP/IP technology to a wireless environment. In the process, it provides a definitive reference manual on the 802.11 protocol stack, discussing the evolution and future direction of this standard. The issues associated with reliably transmitting data in the very chaotic wireless world are discussed, but the real meat comes in the book's addressing of the logic behind the radio circuitry in WLANs. Along with these insights that an RF engineer will love, the book is a great guide for anyone with protocol analysis tools looking at wireless traffic, especially given the clear illustrations in the text.
Acknowledging the rapid evolution of 802.11 standards over the last few years, an excellent summary is provided, from the venerable 802.11b standard through the -a and -g standards, and moving into future standards being developed by the 802.11 TGs. Maufer provides some key insights on future directions and capabilities of WLANs, too.
The book covers the principal areas of wireless networking, including security, the hot topic for every LAN administrator. While the book does a great job of addressing the theoretical security issues (and other aspects of wireless LANs operation), it is light on practical recommendations in day-to-day WLAN management. The Guide delves into creating strong passwords for use with WLANs, though, and addresses the strengths and weaknesses of the WEP architecture. It is especially rich in providing insights into the handshake and authentication procedures within WEP. A number of proposed security enhancements are discussed, including the deployment of RADIUS servers to provide authentication in enterprise WLANs. In closing on this section, Thomas provides good insights into WPA, which is becoming the future standard to WLAN security.
For a WLAN component designer, this is probably one of the best reference guides available, and this is also true for power users who really want to get under the hood of today's WLAN systems. However, for a network administrator seeking advice on how to address a herd of WLAN devices, my recommendation would be to seek elsewhere. Maufer offers little information about vendors' product types/models, making the detailed technology discussions independent of real-world products. For the administrator able to glean the technical details of their chosen WLAN products elsewhere, though, this book can be an invaluable guide in deciding the pros and cons of a particular product solution.
Along the way, Maufer provides a series of helpful screenshots, as guides to the technical discussions addressed in the various chapters. He provides a very balanced overview in the use of WLAN technologies for Apple, Linux and Windows platforms.
I recommend this Guide as an excellent text, rich in technical details, and protocol/logic illustrations. A "must read" for understanding WLAN technology in depth. With the rapid advances in WLAN technology, this book represents a excellent benchmark on 802.11 technology, from the perspective of its 2004 timeframe, and a sequel from the author would be an excellent additional resource for WLAN system designers and architects.
You can purchase A Field Guide To Wireless LANs for Administrators and Power Users from bn.com. Slashdot welcomes readers' book reviews -- to see your own review here, read the book review guidelines, then visit the submission page.
Thats ok, at that point you'll be properly online with your spiffy wireless connection, and able to steal the revised eBook edition!
I was writing a review on the pc... and it was like 'peepeepeepeepeepeepeepeep'...
And then... like... half of my formatting was gone...
And I was like... 'uhhhnn?'
It.. devoured.. my closing italics tag. It was a really good tag... And then I had to do it again because all of the slashdot readers were like yelling at me about it.
It was kind of...
a bummer.
"Have you wondered about how the magic of wireless networks for PC's happens?"
Duh, it's magic...
Well there's this plug for the cable(with eight pins instead of 4 for much more speed!), a radio thingy, and lots of little electronical chip things, and they make the wire talk to the air using the antenna. I heard some of them have a little penguin inside to help move the webpages around and deliver my email. Not that complicated, really.
Please help metamoderate.
In tribute to this "Great Book" I submit a great site. Netstumbler.com and Netstumbler.org Forum
I am Bennett Haselton! I am Bennett Haselton!
I think I read one of your books: "The Anonymous Coward's Guide to WLAN Security"
Chapter One: Never Tell Anyone Your Real Name
A long time ago I was playing Sega Genesis with my friend. He pointed at the console and said "Do you know how that thing works?" I was in CS at the time, but didn't know the specs of this machine, so I said "No." So he informs me, "There's actually a little computer in there."
word.