How do wireless networks work?
As
the name suggests, wireless networks, sometimes called WiFi, allow you
to connect to the internet without relying on wires. If your home,
office, airport, or even local coffee shop has a wireless connection,
you can access the network from anywhere that is within that wireless
area.
Wireless
networks rely on radio waves rather than wires to connect computers to
the internet. A transmitter, known as a wireless access point or
gateway, is wired into an internet connection. This provides a "hotspot"
that transmits the connectivity over radio waves. Hotspots have
identifying information, including an item called an SSID (service set
identifier), that allow computers to locate them. Computers that have a
wireless card and have permission to access the wireless frequency can
take advantage of the network connection. Some computers may
automatically identify open wireless networks in a given area, while
others may require that you locate and manually enter information such
as the SSID.