Does 802.11n Spell the 'End of Ethernet'? 404
alphadogg writes "Is the advent of the 802.11n wireless standard the 'end of Ethernet'... at least in terms of client access to the LAN? That's the provocative title, and thesis, of a new report in which the author began looking into the question when he heard a growing number of clients asking whether it was time to discontinue wired LAN deployments for connecting clients. Would 11n, the next generation high-throughput Wi-Fi, make the RJ45 connector in the office wall as obsolete as gaslights?"
Um, no. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Um, no. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Um, no. (Score:5, Insightful)
SECURITY.
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No, those space ships popping into existance in the sky aren't angry-transdimensional aliens coming to ravage our world because we were dropping harmful EM radiaition onto their pleantes, honestly!
Re:Um, no. (Score:5, Interesting)
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Re:Um, no. (Score:4, Funny)
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From the Wi-Fi Alliance's Draft 2.0 FAQ (PDF file) [wi-fi.org]:
In some configurations, 802.11n products can interfere with ot
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Re:Um, no. (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:Um, no. (Score:5, Insightful)
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Now you could say that that argument doesn't apply to businesses but I'd say that the computers that were stolen from Wells Fargo a few years back would beg to differ. At the time I was a Wells Fargo client and I received a nice
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Now with a wireless connection, a person could hide their attempts to access the network. They could also do it from far enough away to not impose suspicion. This ability is an extra ability that makes wireless dangerous to some on certain networks. It might not be the same for mom and pop, but when they are doi
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Saying that someone could break in and steal the computers doesn't mean throwing any other thought of securing the network away. It could mean that you might be hacked by someone who would never break into anything
Re:Um, no. (Score:5, Informative)
they not only can require registration before turning on a port, but allow only one specific mac per port and either notify you, record all the data, and or shut off any port that is doing anything funy with mac addresses.
they also have a VLAN capacility that makes virtual switches connecting any ports in your whole building so noone but those on those specific ports can listen in.
and hacking a CISCO switch is no easy task.
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We use VLANs, and many of them. Yes, you can only see traffic from your local segment. And hacking the Cisco switch is no more difficult than hacking everything else.
In big places, t
Re:Um, no. (Score:5, Informative)
I dunno about that....at least in the Southeastern part of the US. Once you get past the locked doors, you run the risk of dogs and the inhabitants with their guns drawn and ready to fire.
Somehow I think sitting out in a car a distance away trying to hack the wireless is a little safer. It does and the very least, make the 'head shot' a little harder.
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Where's the "-1 Wrong" modifier?! Actually, this one is wrong for so many reasons I don't know where to start.
The simplest thing to point out if that if you use a one-time pad more than once (and you're going to send more than one packet in 10 seconds, I assure you), you lose the security properties of the one-time pad. So all your syncing (which is obviously going to be a huge pain in the butt) is wasted since you didn't get the thing that it was supposed to get you.
OTP are essentially useless in pr
Don't forget denial-of-service (Score:5, Insightful)
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Not if the WiFi network is configured for reasonable security. Physical access is typically much easier to get than the AES keys.
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It's not just about ease of access, it's also about detection. It's very easy to break a window to get into a building, but it is also very easy to detect that type on intrusion. It may be more difficult to crack a WiFi connection, but it also not as obvious when someone is sniffing your packets.
And in any
Re:Um, no. (Score:5, Interesting)
The other reason is reliability: I can count on my 100BaseTX network delivering 7-9MB/s with very little chance of external influences causing my link to either slow down or die. With wireless, I am at the mercy of nearby interference sources including cordless phones, electrical appliances, various gadgets and other wireless networking equipment, any of which can cause the link to do a number of undesirable things from retraining to going down.
There are two reasons I got WiFi: 1) my previous router was dying and 2) I got a laptop. I only use WiFi with the laptop but whenever I do large transfers, I still hook it up to Ethernet since it is ~5X as fast and never goes down. 802.11g is good enough for internet access and moderate file copying with my two laptops so I most likely won't be bothering with 802.11n until my 802.11g router either dies or becomes a broadband bottleneck.
BTW, it is possible to eavesdrop on Ethernet without touching the cables by capturing EMI from the UTP cables - there was a proof of concept for this some years ago where they managed to reconstruct a B&W image from a VGA cable by placing the receiver antenna ~1m from the cable using commodity components. That's pretty far from monitoring from a van parked a few houses down the road but it certainly proves the feasibility.
Re:Um, no. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Um, no. (Score:5, Interesting)
Yeah, that moves your vulnerability away from the hobbyist tier and into the professional tier, but honestly, which one scares you more?
Guess you could always wrap your cable in tin-foil.
Re:Um, no. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Um, no. (Score:5, Informative)
Shielded Twisted Pair will deal with this for you. It has been on the market for the past 2 or 3 decades. Maybe more.
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Contrary to popular belief, Faraday cages do little to stop professi
Re:Um, no. (Score:5, Insightful)
Right. There are too many reasons to use ethernet, and security is just one of them. Ethernet is also more reliable, and it's still faster. 802.11n is not running as fast as 1Gbps (which is what both my home and work network are running at). Give it a couple years, and we'll probably all be running 10Gbps networks, and though wireless speeds will improve too, I see no reason to believe that they'll ever catch up. Also, wired connections are more reliable, easier to control, etc.
Now, I don't see much reason to string ethernet through people's homes, at least not most of the time. Use WPA, secure each of your computers (password protect them and firewall any services you aren't using, preferably don't use Windows). You'll be fine, and 802.11n is probably way faster than any internet connection you might have.
And how about open drivers. (Score:3, Insightful)
It's a well known fact that UWB and other existing techniques can push wireless bandwitdth far past what 802.11n offers, but they're n
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The game is to incrementally push the consumer market into a series of screwed up proprietary drivers to push out open standards and ensure that only "enthusiasts" use open source.
It's possible that you're being paranoid on the drivers issue (sorry, don't mean to be insulting, but it's possible). However, I'm sure that the game is to incrementally push the consumer market to new devices. Many hardware companies do this-- they don't want to release a real solution all at once, but instead constantly relea
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This is basically what the article is about - not whether wired is faster (it is), but whether that matters to most users? They argue that metrics like ease of moving around to collaborate with different people are more important than technical benchmarks like latency and jitter since 802.11n is "good enough" in those respects.
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Whether it's RAM, processor speeds, or bandwidth, the history of computers has shown the same pattern. As our capabilities increase, we find ways to use the "extra".
Maybe we'll hit a ceiling when we can stream multiple uncompressed full-length movies in real time without bottlenecks. I'm of the opinion, though, that computers (and networks) can never be too fast, too small, or too energy efficient.
Re:Um, no. (Score:5, Informative)
I do. Media servers. Although the theoretical data rate of 802.11n is high enough for several HD video streams, in practice you only get a third of the theoretical data rate reliably, making it barely adequate for 1-2 streams. Start actually moving those files around to store, say, on a laptop drive for watching later, and you'll really find wireless inadequate.
There are places in the world where that is not true today, where 100Mbps Internet connections are common. I expect we'll see that even in the US, as fiber-to-the-home initiatives are rolled out. There's one in my neck of the woods, called UTOPIA. Right now they're only providing 10Mbps (symmetric), but the plan is to ramp that up to 100Mbps in the future.
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No, but it does come with OMFG ponies.
Re:Um, no. (Score:4, Funny)
It is a matter of contention ratio.
An average office has a contention ratio of 1:100 for server access and it still works. A WLAN contended to 1:100 will not work. So you have to upgrade your porcine fleet with higher thrust engines. You do that by rolling out a big wireless switch and many small accesspoints under its control each of which has a contention ratio of under 1:10. At that contention ratio deployments for anything more than 10PCs is uneconomical.
This is all of course if we leave the security aside. But that is another story.
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wait (Score:5, Insightful)
and what do we have now? both systems coexisting with each other
same gonna happen again
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The bigger question is will it coexist with my cordless phone or will I have to upgrade to 5GHz?
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802.11n runs at 2.4GHz and/or 5GHz. Legacy support for your G hardware and 5GHz for your newer N hardware and your legacy A (if you have it). Should coexist just fine.
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All radio signals interefere.
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Is there some new exploit I haven't heard of that lets people break WPA2? If they're cracking AES encryption along with private certificates then I'm impressed. Honest question though given that I manage a wireless network which is of course on its own VLAN.
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One of those you can do from the parking lot (or with a good antenna, quite a good distance away). One you need physical access for.
Thanks, but I'll run encryption over my wires before I'll switch to trusting the sam
Re:I want my ETHERNET! (Score:4, Interesting)
Just as soon as someone finds the answer to that, or more likely, finds a way to get around needing it (let's not insult each other and pretend it will never happen), they can have the fame, I don't want it.
I understand your point, but it doesn't change the fact that, however strong you claim cryptosystem-X, I can still assert with 100% accuracy that running it over wires instead of broadcast RF greatly improves that strength.
Maybe not. (Score:2)
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I think wifi has *already* replaced quite a few cat-5 networks [or network attachments]. the 'n' revision j
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What I have is gigabit, and it's just barely good enough. Once you move to gigabit, it's perfectly workable to set up diskless clients booting over the network off iSCSI disks. No more disk noise in the workstations or the media PC, much easier backups, no more hundreds of gigabytes wasted distributed around where you need maybe 4 for the OS. Etc.
And if 1 gigabit made moving disks out of the local machines useful, going to 10 gigabit will make moving even more things out
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I submit to you that a RGU is a better option for the home than a complicated iSCSI PXE boot process where you have to construct a new image for every new machine.
Naturally Matrox has this one covered. RGU Link [matrox.com] Fanless, no moving parts, you have all your USB and firewire and you're free to have a noisy PC in the basement with all the power you want. Much easier to setup and use.
I do agree though, in the work environment I barely get by with gigabit and 10gigabit isn't cost effective yet. I'm looking at
No (Score:5, Insightful)
And I don't know what you're talking about, I still use gaslights.
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Just like BNC
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If I have decently configured switches / AP's and correctly configured network services (DHCP, Cryto, IDS etc..) then which is more secure? Well the wired solution is. Why? because I am not making my network available for anyone to t
Re:No (Score:5, Informative)
Physical access is useless in a properly configured wired network. Have you ever heard of 802.1x? It's still considered a part of the best that wireless has to offer for security. Do you know what 802.1x was created for? Wired networks. If you properly configure 802.1x on a wired network, you not only need physical access, but you need to authenticate to be able to reach anything except the authentication server. You will get no broadcasts forwarded to your port for sniffing. You will not be able to send anything out of the network. You don't need encryption if you don't forward a single packet to that port other than the deny messages from the authentication server. Of course, you can encrypt over ethernet as well, but it isn't necessary with a properly configured network, even without physical security to the ports.
Wireless took Ethernet's leftovers and did the best they could, and it is still less than Ethernet. Equally secure networks *always* leave the wired network more secure. Anyone that thinks otherwise doesn't know how to configure a wired network.
Shared medium. (Score:5, Insightful)
--saint
You can have my wired ethernet... (Score:2)
Interference? Security? (Score:2)
Then there is the security issue. Yes you can lock down your wireless but since it is wireless someone can sit outside and keep trying over and over vs. if you don;t have it they need physical access.
This isn't saying wireless is bad, just they are factors which wil
It's still wi-fi (Score:2)
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Yes, of course (Score:5, Insightful)
What do they teach them in schools these days?
Re:Yes, of course (Score:5, Funny)
Had a look at Myspace or Facebook? Sigh.
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It isn't an issue of numbers per antenna, it is view angles, polarization, signal propagation and blockages. 4 antennas per AP lets you set them at different locations (wired back to the switch) and at various inclination angles to be sure the signal covers the space you care about.
Doubt it. (Score:5, Interesting)
Wireless AP can't hand (Score:2)
Also RJ45 ports are build in to just all systems now days build in the chipset or running over the pci-e bus that can hit the full gig-e speed. There are a few with build in wireless but most of there are on the slower usb bus that pushes up cpu load. Pci N cards are $50 or more per card.
I don't think so... (Score:2)
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Because microwaves are imperfectly shielded and operate at 2450 MHz.
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Yes [wikipedia.org]
I'm surprised at the number of people that don't realized 802.11n can operate at 5GHz, like 802.11a. I thought this was one of the major selling points.
Yeah OK (Score:5, Interesting)
The strangest was a friend who used a linksys router with the SSID "linksys" and WEP encryption, who lived next door to someone using the same SSID but no encryption. Oh yeah, the wireless network managers on various OS's had a field day with that one. Ethernet just doesn't have those problems, so it will always been needed when mobility is less important than reliability.
many nodes (Score:2)
No, wired networks aren't going away soon..... (Score:2)
Reasons not to change. (Score:4, Insightful)
The issues are as follows.
Security: There is little or none. All of your transactions are flying through the air and anyone with the proper equipment (which can be obtained at the local electronics store for very little money) can intercept those packets. Even if you bother to use encryption all that has to be done is some processing to "crack" the encryption. Without breaking into my house/office and tying into my physical copper network there is no way to intercept packets on a copper network.
Stability: I cant speak for 802.11n as of yet. My AP has never been rebooted and my clients stay conected. However my prior 802.11x products were somewhat less stable.
Speed: 802.11x is a bus topology much like a hub. True they are running a great deal of bandwidth now. For few users this is great however what happens when you have 20 users on the same access point sharing the same bandwidth.
I do however see uses in business for this. I don't think at this time it is the end all replacement for the simple switch and the complicated wiring closet yet.
Not in my datacentre (Score:2)
Sounds insane (Score:2)
Gaslight? (Score:2)
Not in our enviroment (Score:2)
Secondly, we run ScreamernetII & Qmaster/Xgrid on every single machine in the building. That is one re
Obvious (Score:2)
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Ubiquity (Score:3, Insightful)
As long as it's a peripherial, I don't care how cheap or easy to install, it'll never replace what's already there, ie. the Ethernet port. For more reference, see USB vs. Firewire.
2.4GHz Hell (Score:2, Informative)
Talk about stupidity (Score:2)
Obviously this idiot doesn't understand the difference between 7mbps Internet access and access to files, printers, databases and other applications.
"Currently I think [150-180Mbps] is plenty," says Ruman. "Most companies are still using 100Mbps switches and have not made the
Not even mom-and-pop businesses (Score:2, Interesting)
Not a snowball's chance in hell it will. (Score:2)
Shared bandwidth (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:Shared bandwidth (Score:4, Insightful)
For reference, gigabit ethernet offers theoretical 128 MB/s transfers, while local hard drives offer between 60 and 90 MB/s. Obviously the latency will be a bit higher on the networked drives, but you'll see no drop in sustained transfer rates. Compare that to a theoretical maximum of 37.5 MB/s for wireless N or 6.75 MB/s for wireless G, and bear in mind that those speeds will be shared with all clients rather than dedicated as with the ethernet connection.
3 words (Score:3, Insightful)
tcp vs udp (Score:3, Funny)
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Except for the shared bandwidth issue, and the fact that wireless theoretical speeds are never achieved in the real world. You could compare it to people on a 100M hub-based network - the kind we used 10+ years ago.
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Every 20-30 minutes? Try every few seconds at peak times. The more wireless networks are around, the more I need my wires.
I'm in a building where I can see about 30 802.11g networks. The only way I can get my wireless network to work reliably at high-usage times (the evening) is to be at my desk about 4' from the WAP. When I'm 4' from the WAP (and router), why bother with wireless?
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No, you're thinking of "Aether" (as in "lumineferous Aether"), whose existence was shown unlikely by the Michelson-Morely and follow-on experiments.
Ethernet is talking about "ether", the class of compounds where e.g. two alkyl groups are linked with an oxygen atom in between (eg diethyl ether). The network tubes are filled with this stuff. You might think that the reason is et