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Access Points 

Betina
09.12.22 15:47:52 Comment(s)

Indoor and outdoor Aps

Indoor and Outdoor Access Points

 An access point is a device that a stand-alone device or computer that allows wireless devices (such as laptop computers) to connect to and communicate with a wired computer network.

Wi-Fi capacity requirements in classrooms, office spaces, and medium-size venues are rising due to the increase in the number of Wi-Fi connected devices. An increase in bandwidth requirements for applications and an ever-growing assortment of IoT devices puts further strain on already stretched Wi-Fi networks.

The Ruckus access point (AP) with the latest Wi-Fi 6 (802.11 ax) technology delivers the ideal combination of increased capacity, improved coverage and affordability in dense environments. Stunning Wi-Fi Performance - Mitigate interference and extend coverage with patented BeamFlex+™ adaptive antenna technology utilizing several directional antenna patterns.

 

  • Serve more devices - Connect more devices simultaneously with four MU-MIMO spatial streams and concurrent dual-band 2.4/5GHz radios while enhancing device performance
  • Converged access point - Allow customers to eliminate siloed networks and unify Wi-Fi and IoT technologies into one single network by using built-in Bluetooth® Low Energy and Zigbee, and also expand to any future wireless technologies
  • Automate Optimal Throughput - ChannelFly dynamic channel technology uses machine learning to automatically find the least congested channels. You always get the highest throughput the band can support
  • Better Mesh Networking - Reduce expensive cabling, and complex mesh configurations by checking a box with SmartMesh wireless meshing technology to dynamically create self-forming, self-healing mesh networks
  • More than Wi-Fi - Support services beyond Wi-Fi with RUCKUS IoT Suite, Cloud path security and onboarding software, SPoT Wi-Fi locationing engine, and RUCKUS analytics


If the existing router doesn't accommodate wireless devices, which is rare, you can expand the network by adding a wireless AP device to the network instead of adding a second router. Businesses can install a set of APs to cover an office building. Access points enable Wi-Fi infrastructure mode networking.

Although Wi-Fi connections technically do not require the use of APs, they enable Wi-Fi networks to scale to larger distances and numbers of clients. Modern access points support up to 255 clients, while old ones support only about 20. APs also provide the bridging capability that enables a local Wi-Fi network to connect to other wired networks.

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