Wireless
is cheap and convenient, but take care!
Alan
Zisman
In
the 1968 movie The Graduate, at a party the young university
graduate gets one word of advice: “Plastics.” If the movie
was
being remade today, that word might be “wireless.”
I’m
referring to what’s sometimes called WiFi, a set of technical
specifications for wireless networking officially known as IEEE
802.11.
WiFi
first started to become popular in 1999 with Apple’s
Airport-branded 802.11 products pushed the price of wireless
networking from over $1000 to a few hundred dollars or so. Now,
newspaper fliers from the likes of Future Shop, Office Depot, and
more are filled with a variety of makes and models of wireless
devices at increasingly affordable prices.
What’s
the attraction? More and more people have cable or DSL broadband
Internet setups and want to connect multiple computers. If
they’re
all in one room it’s generally not a big deal to run networking
cable along the baseboards to connect them all together. But
stringing cable to the basement or the upstairs bedroom is another
matter. WiFi, promising a range of about 50 meters, makes the cabling
unnecessary; the added convenience makes many people willing to pay
the price premium for wireless. Besides, there’s the dream of
being
able to connect your laptop to the Internet while sitting in the sun
in the yard. And then you can connect your laptop to other wireless
networks, at University or perhaps in your local café.
You’ll
need a wireless base station (also known as access point or router)
to connect to your cable or DSL modem and a wireless adapter for each
computer. There are PCMCIA cards for laptops, internal PCI cards for
desktops, or external USB adapters that can attach to both laptops
and desktops. Macs made since 1999 or so require Apple’s Airport
or
Airport Extreme adapters, though they can connect to any standard
base station.
Installation
is relatively straightforward.
Because
802.11 is a standard, in theory you should be able to mix base
stations and adapters from different manufacturers and can mix PCs
and Macs on the same network. There are a few things to note,
however. Two different WiFi standards are commonly available. 802.11b
is a slower standard that is still widely sold (at lower prices). It
can be mixed with the newer, faster 802.11g devices, though in many
cases a mixed network will run at the slower speeds. (These slower
speeds are still plenty adequate for Internet access). Some models
promise still-faster Turbo modes; these non-standard modes will only
work connecting to hardware of the same brand. (There’s also a
less-common 802.11a standard that doesn’t connect to
“b” or “g”
devices).
Be
aware that if it’s easy for you to sit in your back yard and use
your Internet service it’s also easy for your neighbours to
access
your Internet connection. Maybe you don’t care; that
doesn’t mean
that they can access the files on your hard drive (at as long as you
don’t have file sharing turned on with no passwords protecting
it).
When I took my laptop with me on vacation this past summer, I found a
number of nearby networks inadvertently (but conveniently for me!)
making their Internet connections available.
If
you don’t want to leave your Internet connection open to nearby
freeloaders, spend a little time learning to go beyond your wireless
base station’s default settings. At a minimum, change the default
network name (usually something like the brand name) and turn off the
setting to broadcasts that name. That way, your network offers itself
to anyone in the neighbourhood. Consider turning on encryption, so
even if an outsider does try to connect, they’ll need to know a
(long!) pass-phrase.