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CompTIA Network+ Study Guide: Exam N10-007

You're reading from   CompTIA Network+ Study Guide: Exam N10-007 Todd Lammle's bestselling CompTIA Network+ Study Guide for the N10-007 exam!

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2018
Publisher Wiley
ISBN-13 9781119432258
Length 1008 pages
Edition 4th Edition
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Author (1):
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Todd Lammle Todd Lammle
Author Profile Icon Todd Lammle
Todd Lammle
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Table of Contents (27) Chapters Close

1. Introduction FREE CHAPTER 2. Chapter 1: Introduction to Networks 3. Chapter 2: The Open Systems Interconnection Specifications 4. Chapter 3: Networking Topologies, Connectors, and Wiring Standards 5. Chapter 4: The Current Ethernet Specifications 6. Chapter 5: Networking Devices 7. Chapter 6: Introduction to the Internet Protocol 8. Chapter 7: IP Addressing 9. Chapter 8: IP Subnetting, Troubleshooting IP, and Introduction to NAT 10. Chapter 9: Introduction to IP Routing 11. Chapter 10: Routing Protocols 12. Chapter 11: Switching and Virtual LANs 13. Chapter 12: Wireless Networking 14. Chapter 13: Authentication and Access Control 15. Chapter 14: Network Threats and Mitigation 16. Chapter 15: Physical Security and Risk 17. Chapter 16: Wide Area Networks 18. Chapter 17: Troubleshooting Tools 19. Chapter 18: Software and Hardware Tools 20. Chapter 19: Network Troubleshooting 21. Chapter 20: Management, Monitoring, and Optimization 22. Index
23. Advert
24. EULA
Appendix A: Answers to Written Labs
1. Appendix B: Answers to Review Questions
2. Appendix C: Subnetting Class A

Introduction to Wireless Technology

Transmitting a signal using the typical 802.11 specifications works a lot like it does with a basic Ethernet hub: They’re both two-way forms of communication, and they both use the same frequency to both transmit and receive, often referred to as half-duplex as mentioned in the chapter introduction. Wireless LANs (WLANs) use radio frequencies (RFs) that are radiated into the air from an antenna that creates radio waves. These waves can be absorbed, refracted, or reflected by walls, water, and metal surfaces, resulting in low signal strength. So because of this innate vulnerability to surrounding environmental factors, it’s pretty apparent that wireless will never offer us the same robustness as a wired network can, but that still doesn’t mean we’re not going to run wireless. Believe me, we definitely will!

We can increase the transmitting power and we’d be able to gain a greater transmitting distance, but doing so...

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