01. Which two conditions have favored adoption of 802.11g over 802.11a? (Choose two.)

Refer to the exhibit. When configuring the wireless access point, which setting does the network administrator use to configure the unique identifier that client devices use to distinguish this wireless network from others?
- 802.11a suffers from a shorter range than 802.11g.
- The 2.4 GHz frequency band is not as crowded as the 5 GHz band.
- 802.11a is more susceptible to RF interference from common commercial items.
- 802.11a uses a more expensive modulation technique than 802.11g.
- 802.11g is backward compatible with 802.11b, but 802.11a is not.
- 802.11i uses 3DES for encryption.
- Open authentication uses no client or AP verification.
- The 802.11i protocol is functionally identical to WPA.
- 802.11i incorporates a RADIUS server for enterprise authentication.
- A wireless client first associates with an AP and then authenticates for network access.
- set up WEP on the access point only
- set up open access on both the access point and each device connected to it
- set up full encryption on the access point while leaving each device connected to the network open
- set up full encryption on each device of the WLAN while leaving the access point settings open

Refer to the exhibit. When configuring the wireless access point, which setting does the network administrator use to configure the unique identifier that client devices use to distinguish this wireless network from others?
- Network Mode
- Network Name (SSID)
- Radio Band
- Wide Channel
- Standard Channel
- MAC address filtering prevents the contents of wireless frames from being viewable.
- Providing a wireless client with the network key allows an available network to be visible.
- Disabling an access point from broadcasting the SSID prevents the access point from being discovered.
- Default SSIDs on specific manufacturer APs are generally known and may permit hostile wireless connections.
- Manually adding a network and setting the known SSID on a wireless client makes the network visible even if the SSID is not being broadcast.
- This might be RF channel overlap, so the technician should verify the channels in use on each wireless access point and change to non-overlapping channels.
- The RF power settings might be set too low on the wireless access points servicing the room. Increase the RF output power on all wireless access points.
- Install a new wireless access point in this center area to provide coverage.
- Verify that the wireless access points have sufficient in-line power and connectivity to the wired network.
- gateway for connecting to other network infrastructures
- built-in Ethernet switch
- network management station
- VTP server
- wireless access point
- VPN concentrator
- CSMA/CD
- token passing
- CSMA/CA
- Polling
- Wireless networks are typically slower than wired networks.
- Televisions and other devices can interfere with wireless signals.
- Wireless networks broadcast data over a medium that allows easy access.
- Environmental factors such as thunderstorms can affect wireless networks.
- 802.11a
- 802.11b
- 802.11g
- 802.11n
- A rogue access point represents a security risk for the local network.
- Wireless networks offer the same security features as wired networks.
- Using encryption prevents unauthorized clients from associating with an access point.
- An attacker needs physical access to at least one network device to launch an attack.
- With SSID broadcast disabled, an attacker must sniff the SSID before being able to connect.
- site survey
- risk assessment
- scalability design
- network protocol analysis
- authentication
- SSID broadcasting
- MAC address filtering
- EAP (Extensible Authentication Protocol)
- Radius (Remote Authentication Dial-In User Service)
- beacon
- password
- probe request
- association request
- to keep users segregated on separate subnets
- to control the amount of bandwidth that is utilized
- to keep signals from interfering with each other
- to keep traffic secure
- converts clear text data before transmission
- indicates which channel the data should flow on
- determines that the correct host is utilizing the network
- allows the host to choose which channel to use
- Authorized access points can transmit excess traffic to rogue access points to help alleviate congestion.
- Unauthorized users can gain access to internal servers, thus causing a security hole.
- All traffic that uses the same channel as the rogue access point will be encrypted.
- All traffic that uses the same channel as the rogue access point will be required to authenticate.
- Force all devices on a WLAN to authenticate and monitor for any unknown devices.
- Enable access points to send an SSID to each device wanting to use the network.
- Configure MAC filtering on all authorized access points.
- Disable SSID broadcasts.
- dynamically assigns an IP address to the host
- provides local DHCP services
- converts data from 802.11 to 802.3 frame encapsulation
- provides a gateway for connecting to other networks
- bandwidth saturation
- privacy concerns
- media contention
- device interoperability
- association response
- beacon
- key
- probe request
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