Question: What is Ad-Hoc Mode in Wireless Networking?
Answer:
On
wireless computer networks, ad-hoc mode is a method for wireless devices
to directly communicate with each other. Operating in ad-hoc mode allows all
wireless devices within range of each other to discover and communicate in
peer-to-peer fashion without involving central access points (including those
built in to broadband wireless routers).
To
set up an ad-hoc wireless network, each wireless adapter must be configured for
ad-hoc mode versus the alternative infrastructure mode. In addition, all
wireless adapters on the ad-hoc network must use the same SSID and the same channel
number.
An
ad-hoc network tends to feature a small group of devices all in very close
proximity to each other. Performance suffers as the number of devices grows, and
a large ad-hoc network quickly becomes difficult to manage. Ad-hoc networks
cannot bridge to wired LANs or to the Internet without installing a
special-purpose gateway.
Ad
hoc networks make sense when needing to build a small, all-wireless LAN quickly
and spend the minimum amount of money on equipment. Ad hoc networks also work
well as a temporary fallback mechanism if normally-available infrastructure
mode gear (access points or routers) stop functioning.
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