Labels

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Belkin 802.11g Wireless Access Point reviewed

| Wireless Driver & Software

Wireless Security

I then checked to see whether enabling WEP or WPA caused a throughput hit. Figure 7 tells the tale.

Normal, WEP, WPA throughput comparison

Figure 7: Normal, WEP, WPA throughput comparison
(click on the image for a full-sized view)

The results are a mixed good-news / bad-news story. The good news is that you don’t have to take a throughput hit when enabling either WEP or WPA-based security. The bad is that when using WPA you must use the AES encryption mode to avoid the 15% throughput reduction that you’ll get using TKIP encryption.

Since AES is not part of the WPA spec, it’s not supported by all WPA-compliant products, and WPA-enabled APs can’t simultaneously support both TKIP and AES WPA clients. So if you have an all-Belkin (or Broadcom-based) 11g WLAN, you’ll be ok using WPA with the optional AES encryption. But other product combinations could result in a WPA-enabled throughput hit.

Even with this issue, however, I still strongly encourage you to use WPA and not worry about the throughput hit. The improved security is worth it and 11g has bandwidth to spare for most SOHO users.

No comments:

Post a Comment