However, if you did this, you would also be well out of compliance with FCC
regulations, and you could be shut down at any time. Remember that the
certification of 802.11 devices specifically includes certification with a
specific (set of) antenna. If you change the antenna, then you no longer
have a legal configuration, an no intelligent vendor will support you in
that case. The liability is not worth it to them.
--
Eric Hildum
> From: Benjamin <bkml@mac.com>
> Reply-To: keitai-l@appelsiini.net
> Date: Tue, 9 Jul 2002 23:24:11 +0900
> To: keitai-l@appelsiini.net
> Subject: (keitai-l) Re: International Usage
>
> However, if you were to use this as point to point, from roof-top to
> roof-top or from roof-top to a fixed spot at ground level, provided
> there is clear line of sight, I would think that it should be possible
> with uni-directional antennae, proper alignment and calibration, to get
> close to the maximum bandwidth as per spec. Wouldn't you think so?
Received on Wed Jul 10 17:45:39 2002