SOHO and Personal Use
Many wireless products have been designed with the home office
or small office in mind. Features and versatility required for enterprise and
large corporate use are typically missing. Even the Wi-Fi Alliance has started
distinguishing between such devices with labeling of WPA certification that
differs between intended products usage. WPA-Personal depicts a product intended
for SOHO usage, and WPA-Enterprise indicates products intended for usage in
large corporate networks. This section describes some of the more popular
products that historically have been geared for the SOHO market.
Buffalo
Founded in 2000, Buffalo Technology (USA), Inc. is a subsidiary
of Buffalo, Inc. (JAPAN). The company's mandate since inception has been to
support an easy-to-use computer network, and most recently, to make the Internet
easier to use.
Buffalo offers a few wired products (four- and eight-port
switches) appropriate for the home or small-office market. Buffalo also offers
WLAN products, including APs, client devices, and wireless bridges. As with its
wired products, the features and capabilities of the Buffalo WLAN products are a
bit limited for use in medium-size business and enterprise networks. The WLAN
products, however, support numerous features that are attractive to home and
small office users.
For more information, visit http://www.buffalotech.com/wireless/index.php.
D-Link
D-Link manufactures many different products, from silicon chips
for Ethernet and WLAN technology to switching, routing, and WLAN network
devices. D-Link entered the market in 1998, and offered its first wireless
devices in 2000 (a home 802.11b wireless system). D-Link makes very good WLAN
products for the home networking environment, but for corporate and enterprise
environments the WLAN line leaves out many desired features, such as dynamic
security and enterprise-class features.
For more information, visit http://www.dlink.com/.
Linksys
Linksys, founded in 1988, developed and marketed networking
products that were an affordable commodity, enabling anyone to share documents,
files, and e-mail. Over the past 14 years, Linksys has become the market leader
in sales of wireless, routers, network cards, and USB adapters to the home user
through retail and e-commerce channels. In 2003, Linksys was acquired by Cisco
Systems, but remains a totally separate business unit. The Linksys products and
Cisco Aironet products are marketed, sold, and supported as totally different
product lines. The Cisco Aironet product line is geared for the corporate and
enterprise market, whereas the Linksys products are targeted toward the home
user.
Linksys provides various wired and wireless devices. For the
home WLAN user, it provides residential gateways, APs with embedded switches,
and numerous client devices.
For more on Linksys, visit http://www.linksys.com/.
SMC Networks
As a highly recognized name for networking products over the
past 30 years, SMC Networks has been best known for its standards-based
connectivity products, including Ethernet NICs, hubs, and switches. With the
wireless revolution, the movement into the WLAN market was a natural
progression.
SMC offers a variety of WLAN products, including APs, client
devices, and home gateways. The SMC product line supports features desired by
home users, but lacks many of the features sought after by enterprise and
corporate IT engineers.
For more information on SMC, visit http://www.smc.com/.