> > Delay spread indoors is entirely likely to be < 800ms (240m if my > math yeilds correct results.) Outdoors it could be a (quite) > different story, as OFDM has a "lot of difficulty" (deliberate > understatement) when you get into heavy ISI.
So, Jim, are you saying that .b will have advantages outdoors that .a & .g don't have? Or, will the graceful downgrade of .g to non-ODFM transmission be more used outdoors (esentially turning your .g AP into a .b AP)? Or, even worse, will the constant downgrading & retransmission of the .g signal to non-ODFM waveforms make it even WORSE in some outdoor environments? Confused... -Dan [EMAIL PROTECTED] -- general wireless list, a bawug thing <http://www.bawug.org/> [un]subscribe: http://lists.bawug.org/mailman/listinfo/wireless
