Gee, you had to look that up all by yourself?
--
"j" ganz @@
www.sailnow.com
"Horvath" wrote in message
...
On Wed, 21 Jul 2004 11:30:05 -0400, "Scott Vernon"
wrote this crap:
What does 'WIFI' stand for? I know what it is.
Short for wireless fidelity and is meant to be used generically when
referring of any type of 802.11 network, whether 802.11b, 802.11a,
dual-band, etc. The term is promulgated by the Wi-Fi Alliance.
Any products tested and approved as "Wi-Fi Certified" (a registered
trademark) by the Wi-Fi Alliance are certified as interoperable with
each other, even if they are from different manufacturers. A user with
a "Wi-Fi Certified" product can use any brand of access point with any
other brand of client hardware that also is certified. Typically,
however, any Wi-Fi product using the same radio frequency (for
example, 2.4GHz for 802.11b or 11g, 5GHz for 802.11a) will work with
any other, even if not "Wi-Fi Certified."
see also www.wi-fi.org
Pathetic Earthlings! No one can save you now!