inside a hospital where the DSL
> line is coming in
Is this hospital subject to HIPPA security requirements?

Once you install your "WAP-11" how will you know when someone else in your
organization installs one to extend his range to the Parking lot?
Do you have an IS department?
Have you run this concept by them?

:-)

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Mike Avery
Sent: Tuesday, January 21, 2003 4:20 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [BAWUG] Looking to extend 802.11b network


On 21 Jan 2003 at 13:28, James W. Tseng wrote:

> I'm trying to figure out the most economical way to
> extend an indoor 802.11b WLAN.  My environment is
> actually an office inside a hospital where the DSL
> line is coming in.  I want to extend the WLAN signal
> into an operating room suite that is adjacent to the
> office.
>
> I have seen products such as the Linksys WAP11, which
> I understand can be sort of daisy-chained into
> infinite repeaters.  A recent product, Dlink's
> DWL-900+, also has repeating function limited to one
> "hop".
>
> Are there any other products that I should consider?
> I assume that with the setup I have in mind, simply
> getting a more powerful antenna probably wouldn't
> suffice.  Is there a web page somewhere that is a good
> resource of information?


If the office and OR are adjacent, I don't see what the
problem is... unless the wall that separates them has a
lot of steel in it.

If the wall has a lot of steel in it, then playing with
repeaters and antennas is a waste of time.

My suggestion?

Try a wireless router of some sort.  A Linksys
BEFW11S4 or a D-Link DI714P+ should do the job.  See
of the signal will go through the wall.  If it does, you're
problem is resolved.  If it doesn't, then go to plan B....

Several plan B's.... if you already have a Linksys
BEFW11S4 or WAP11 in place, you could try Linksys's
signal booster.  It's pretty new, but I've good things
about it here.

Demarco Tech (hope I got the name right) has some
higher powered devices, as does Surf'n'sip and
Netgate.com which could boost the power and
sensitivity in the OR.

The simplest - and cheapest - answer, politics and
medical realities permitting, would be to run an
ethernet cable through the wall and put the AP in the
OR.

The next simplest - and cheapest - answer is to just run
some LM400 cable through the wall and put an antenna
in the OR with the WAP in the office.

Good luck,
Mike
--
Mike Avery
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
ICQ: 16241692                      AOL IM:MAvery81230
Phone: 970-642-0280
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