The wire, and the security which comes with the wire, or the security requirements that come from the absence of a wire:
A wired network is considered a private network, in the sense that the network owner can generally grant or deny physical access to this network. For example, the wired network inside my house is only accessible to those people inside my house.
However, a wireless network not only has no wire, it also implements a public or shared media. Subject to the reach of the access points and routers, my wireless LAN may be accessible from outside my house, and the owner of a wireless network has no immediate means to grant or deny controlled access to this network.
To solve this problem, wireless networks use sophisticated authentication and encryption methods to ensure that only authorized users can access a given network, and that nobody else can decipher messages sent on that network. An early form of this security protocol is WEP, short for wire-equivalent privacy (although it was later discovered that WEP wasn't very sophisticated to begin with, and is now superseded by more powerful alternatives).
The overhead for authentication and encryption does not exist on a wired network, and impairments that impact the operation on a public media (such as radio-frequency interference. While a wired network might come at the cost of wire installation, it is in principal more secure and faster than a wireless network.
A wired LAN uses wires to connect the computers but a wireless LAN uses radio waves.
LAN is wired WLAN is wireless
Wireless is a type of LAN, it has not replaced it. For some wireless is a simpler technology and certainly easire to install, however the wired lan is both faster and more secure. A wired lan also generally provides more management capabilities than wireless.
Between the wireless network and the wired network
- WEP Wired Equivalent Privacy (WEP) encrypts and secures wireless data transmissions between clients and access points in WLANS.
if your wireless router has lan ports then the answer is yes.
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LANs can be of wireless or wired type.In wireless LAN access points can be used tointerconnect the LANs and to Connect wired LANs bridges can be used. By naghma
local area network is only for small area and wireless local area network is for one building.
Sure, why not? But more specifically, it depends on how you want to use your printer. If you don't mind leaving it on all the time and feel comfortable entering the wireless LAN settings, then this is probably the best option. Then you have complete mobility with your printer and can put it anywhere you want. On the other hand, if you only want to use it when you're using a certain desktop computer, or want to save energy and not leave it running all the time (or the manual instructions for setting the wireless LAN scare you), then put it into wired mode and connect to a LAN-connection computer or your LAN router if it has a USB port. Alternately, if your printer also has an ethernet port for a wired LAN connection, the wired connection may offer you better robustness and self-configuration than the wireless LAN.
A WiFi network and a LAN network differ from each other. The biggest difference is that a WiFi network is run through a wireless connection., whereas a LAN network is run through cable.
Yes, you can. Many routers have ethernet ports which you can use for LAN.