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Client Name: A logical name for your workstation. It allows you to determine which devices are connected to the Access Point without having to memorize every MAC address. This name is included in the Access Point’s list of connected devices.
SSID1: The service set identifier (SSID) allows you to access a specific wireless network.
CAM (Constantly Awake Mode) Keeps the client adapter powered up continuously so there is little lag in message response time. Consumes the most power but offers the highest throughput. Max PSP (Max Power Savings) Causes the Access Point to buffer incoming messages for the client adapter, whichwakes up periodically and polls the Access Point to see if any buffered messages arewaiting for it. The adapter can request each message and then go back to sleep.Conserves the most power but offers the lowest throughput.
Fast PSP (Power Save Mode) Switches between Max PSP and CAM mode, depending on network traffic. This mode switches to CAM when retrieving a large number of packets and switches back to Max PSP after the packets have been retrieved.
Current Profile or Default Profile: Specifies the network configuration in which your client adapter is used. If your driver supports automatic configuration switching, this parameter is entitled Default Profile; otherwise, it is entitled CurrentProfile.
Enable Auto Configuration Switching: Selecting this checkbox enables the client adapter to switch between an enterprise and home network configuration (which you select through the Default Profile parameter above) when it travels out of range and loses association.
Notes: This parameter is supported only by the Windows operating systems and driver version 6.60 or greater.
If your client adapter’s firmware version is below 4.04, your optional SSIDs, which are set by the SSID2 and SSID3 parameters, are effective only for Access Points that are configured to allow broadcast SSIDs.