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Alexutzu4you
Membru Junior

Din: Hunedoara
Inregistrat: acum 17 ani
Eu am la laptop la wireless, functie de radio dar nu stiu cum sa fac sa asc. Exista oare un program cu care as putea face treaba asta.
Am un ASUS X50N cu wireless de 802.11b/g ATHEROS AR5007EG.
Poate exista ceva.


pus acum 16 ani
   
FLORIN-MX
Membru Gold

Inregistrat: acum 17 ani
  poti fi un pic mai explicit ? din ce spui tu se intelege ca vrei sa asculti radio de pe net cu functia de "radio" de la wireless ul tau ...ceea ce e cel putin amuzant

pus acum 16 ani
   
Mrrrr
RI Addict

Din: dragoste
Inregistrat: acum 18 ani
poti asculta radio si fara functia aia... la fel cum merge si pe un comp normal 
iei url de radio si il bagi in winamp (sau alt player)


pus acum 16 ani
   
Alexutzu4you
Membru Junior

Din: Hunedoara
Inregistrat: acum 17 ani
nu chiar.. eu vreau sa asc radio fara net folosind functia de la wireless

pus acum 16 ani
   
Valy-TGV
VETERAN

Din: \m/ d[^_^]b \m/
Inregistrat: acum 18 ani

Alexutzu4you a scris:

nu chiar.. eu vreau sa asc radio fara net folosind functia de la wireless


Nu se poate! Ai inteles gresit.

WiFi a scris:

What Is WiFi?
A wireless network uses radio waves, just like cell phones, televisions and radios do. In fact, communication across a wireless network is a lot like two-way radio communication. Here's what happens:

   1. A computer's wireless adapter translates data into a radio signal and transmits it using an antenna.
   2. A wireless router receives the signal and decodes it. The router sends the information to the Internet using a physical, wired Ethernet connection.

The process also works in reverse, with the router receiving information from the Internet, translating it into a radio signal and sending it to the computer's wireless adapter.

The radios used for WiFi communication are very similar to the radios used for walkie-talkies, cell phones and other devices. They can transmit and receive radio waves, and they can convert 1s and 0s into radio waves and convert the radio waves back into 1s and 0s. But WiFi radios have a few notable differences from other radios:

    * They transmit at frequencies of 2.4 GHz or 5 GHz. This frequency is considerably higher than the frequencies used for cell phones, walkie-talkies and televisions. The higher frequency allows the signal to carry more data.
    * They use 802.11 networking standards, which come in several flavors:
          o 802.11a transmits at 5 GHz and can move up to 54 megabits of data per second. It also uses orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing (OFDM), a more efficient coding technique that splits that radio signal into several sub-signals before they reach a receiver. This greatly reduces interference.
          o 802.11b is the slowest and least expensive standard. For a while, its cost made it popular, but now it's becoming less common as faster standards become less expensive. 802.11b transmits in the 2.4 GHz frequency band of the radio spectrum. It can handle up to 11 megabits of data per second, and it uses complementary code keying (CCK) modulation to improve speeds.
          o 802.11g transmits at 2.4 GHz like 802.11b, but it's a lot faster -- it can handle up to 54 megabits of data per second. 802.11g is faster because it uses the same OFDM coding as 802.11a.
          o 802.11n is the newest standard that is widely available. This standard significantly improves speed and range. For instance, although 802.11g theoretically moves 54 megabits of data per second, it only achieves real-world speeds of about 24 megabits of data per second because of network congestion. 802.11n, however, reportedly can achieve speeds as high as 140 megabits per second. The standard is currently in draft form -- the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) plans to formally ratify 802.11n by the end of 2009.



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pus acum 16 ani
   
Alexutzu4you
Membru Junior

Din: Hunedoara
Inregistrat: acum 17 ani
ok ms de informatie.si eu care imi faceam sperante...

pus acum 16 ani
   
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