Cisco Cisco Aironet 350 Mini-PCI Wireless LAN Client Adapter Designanleitung

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Enterprise Mobility 4.1 Design Guide
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Chapter 1      Cisco Unified Wireless Network Solution Overview
  Requirements of WLAN Systems
  •
Easily manage central or remote access points—Network managers must be able to easily deploy, 
operate, and manage hundreds to thousands of access points within the WLAN campus deployments 
and branch offices or retail, manufacturing, and health care locations. The desired result is one 
framework that provides medium-sized to large organizations the same level of security, scalability, 
reliability, ease of deployment, and management that they have come to expect from their wired 
LANs.
  •
Enhanced Security Services—WLAN Intrusion Prevention System (IPS) and Intrusion Detection 
System (IDS) control to contain wireless threats, enforce security policy compliance, and safeguard 
information. 
  •
Voice Services—Brings the mobility and flexibility of wireless networking to voice 
communications via the Cisco Unified Wired and Wireless network and the Cisco Compatible 
Extensions voice-enabled client devices. 
  •
Location Services  Simultaneous tracking of hundreds to thousands of Wi-Fi and active RFID 
devices from directly within the WLAN infrastructure for critical applications such as high-value 
asset tracking, IT management, location-based security, and business policy enforcement. 
  •
Guest Access— Provides customers, vendors, and partners with easy access to a wired and wireless 
LANs, helps increase productivity, facilitates real-time collaboration, keeps the company 
competitive, and maintains full WLAN security.
WLANs in the enterprise have emerged as one of the most effective means for connecting to a network. 
Figure 1-1 
shows the elements of the Cisco Unified Wireless Network.