Replies: 4 comments 2 replies
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If an adapter has not been certified by controlling agencies for what it is trying to do, then the driver can't support it. Getting DFS approval is a separate certification that has to be tested. Many routers can't do DFS channels because of this. So, what is it you are trying to do? |
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I think he is asking why a chipset in a router can do DFS but the same chipset for USB can't.
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The certification is by product, not chipset. Edit: I am going to have to look this up again but I think the above is correct. |
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Why does no-ir even exist?
I doubt any of these is high enough power to interfere with anything.
Plus couldn't they start with lower power until they detect there is
nothing around.
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I am scratching my head about why a wifi chip would be set to no-IR if it is in a dongle, but allowed to initiate radiation if the same chip is baked into a router/access point product? Whats the real difference? I am sure it has something to do with regulation(s), but I am failing to see the practical semantic line between a dongle and an AP. Anyone have any clues as to the "why" it is done this way?
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