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Glen \Wiley\ Wilson
 
Posts: n/a
Default Multiple Wireless Networks

On Thu, 10 Nov 2005 09:25:54 -0500, "Dave M"
wrote:

According to Apple websites:

- Multihoming is the ability to use all the network interfaces at the same
time, say a wireless connection and a hardwired connection
(http://www.apple.com/lae/powerbook/wireless.html)
- Multithreading is the ability to manage/execute multiple program threads
simultaneously
(http://developer.apple.com/documenta...tithreading/Mu
ltithreading.html)

The virtual WiFi referenced by the OP is the ability to communicate
concurrently with more than one wireless network at the same location.


Yes, using only a single wifi card or onboard wireless. It would seem
possible to bridge between, say, a marina wireless connection and an
onboard wireless network using a single PC without any extra hardware.
So if you, like me, use onboard wireless to network NMEA data, or
anything else, you can hook up to the external network without
disconnecting the local network or adding another wireless card.
Support for bridging networks is already in XP, so all the onboard PCs
get access to the external network as well.

How is this something Mac OS has been doing since 10.1.5? Multihoming (per
Apple's definition) is something even Win98 could do, so I am surprised to
learn that Macs couldn't do it before 10.1.5.

I may be missing something, so please provide a link/reference to what you
are talking about.

BTW to Glen: Looks like a promising use of WiFi technology, thanks for the
link. May even be a better way to solve the repeater problem, which is
currently being solved ad-hoc by manufacturers (See DLink's AP/Repeater)
until a standard emerges.


Yeah, though performance and throughput is always a question in any
virtualizing scheme. The Slotted Seeded Channel Hopping feature may
alleviate or eliminate the performance hit in some cases but it's not
clear to me that SSCH can operate at the same time as the virtualizing
function above. In any event, I'm thinking that normal traffic on a
home or boat network (excluding backups, downloads, or massive file
moves over the network) is bursty enough not to be a problem.

Thanks,
Dave.


Hey, thanks for responding. I was disappointed that I only managed to
stimulate someone into posting standard Mac diatribe #9b. ;-)

__________________________________________________ __________
Glen "Wiley" Wilson usenet1 SPAMNIX at world wide wiley dot com
To reply, lose the capitals and do the obvious.

Take a look at cpRepeater, my NMEA data integrator, repeater, and
logger at http://www.worldwidewiley.com/