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Radio Port 220
Features and Benefits
Mobility
Layer 3 radio port adoption Network-wide adoption and auto configuration of ProCurve radio ports enable rapid deployment of a wireless LAN with minimal network reconfiguration. ProCurve radio ports traverse layer 3 networks to locate the designated ProCurve Wireless Edge Services Module using information returned in a DHCP offer or as part of a DNS request. Once adopted by the wireless module, each radio port receives all configuration parameters, including security and BSSID information to enable wireless operation
Layer 2 radio port adoption Simply connect each ProCurve radio port to a Power over Ethernet-enabled network port, and the device will be automatically discovered and configured by the ProCurve Wireless Edge Services Module
Connectivity
Simultaneous IEEE 802.11a and IEEE 802.11g radio operation supports dual-band wireless clients and provides backward compatibility for IEEE 802.11b wireless devices
Per-radio integrated diversity antenna with omnidirectional coverage provides robust, dual-radio wireless LAN coverage for open office environments
IEEE 802.11h International Telecommunication Union (ITU) compliant Dynamic Frequency Selection (DFS) and Transmit Power Control (TPC) are employed to automatically select another channel and adjust transmit power to minimize interference with systems such as radar, if detected on the same channel
International country configuration Centrally configured on the ProCurve Wireless Edge Services xl and zl Modules, all ProCurve radio ports automatically adjust to match selected country regulatory requirements
Auto Channel Select (ACS) helps minimize radio co-channel interference by automatically selecting an unoccupied radio channel
Adjustable output power controls cell size for high-density access point deployments Resiliency and high availability
Network self-healing In the event of a radio port failure, adjacent ProCurve radio ports adjust transmit power and data rates to maintain wireless LAN coverage
RF detection and interference avoidance ProCurve radio ports automatically recalibrate channel assignments to avoid environmental or other IEEE 802.11-based wireless interference
Security
Choice of IEEE 802.11i, Wi-Fi Protected Access 2 (WPA2), or WPA locks out unauthorized wireless access by authenticating users prior to granting network access; robust Advanced Encryption Standard (AES) or Temporal Key Integrity Protocol (TKIP) encryption secures the data integrity of the wireless traffic
IEEE 802.1X client enables secure authentication of ProCurve radio ports on network ports protected by 802.1X port-based authentication
IEEE 802.1X provides port-based user authentication with support for Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP), TLS, TTLS, PEAP, and SIM, with choice of AES, TKIP, and static or dynamic WEP encryption for protecting wireless traffic between authenticated clients and the access point
Web authentication provides authentication for browser-based wireless clients. Built-in login, welcome, and failure Web pages assist users through the login process
RADIUS-based MAC authentication a wireless client is authenticated with a RADIUS server based on the MAC address of the client; this is useful for clients that have minimal or no user interface
MAC address lockout prevents configured particular MAC addresses from connecting to the network
4 BSSIDs/16 SSIDs per radio Multiple wireless broadcast domains with separate security, authentication, and policy configuration per SSID provide access control of network resources based on user authentication and level of trusted security between the wireless user and the network
Neighbor access point (rogue AP) detection Each ProCurve radio port simultaneously scans for the presence of other access points while servicing wireless clients. Radio ports can be configured as dedicated RF monitors for continuous monitoring of the RF environment
Inter-station traffic blocking prevents communication between client devices associated on the same radio port
Closed system restricts broadcast of SSID as a security measure to conceal presence of the wireless network
Quality of Service (QoS)
Wi-Fi WMM support provides QoS functionality in wireless networks by prioritizing wireless traffic from different applications
SpectraLink voice priority (SVP) support prioritizes SpectraLink voice IP packets sent from a SpectraLink NetLink SVP server to SpectraLink wireless voice handsets to help ensure excellent voice quality
Unscheduled Automatic Power Save Delivery (uAPSD) extends the battery life for Wi-Fi devices such as VoWLAN handsets
Industry-leading warranty
Lifetime warranty for as long as you own the product, with next-business-day advance replacement (available in most countries)
 
 

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