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| Residential | |
| Real Estate offices | |
| Ranches | |
| Insurance Offices | |
| Manufacturing Facilities | |
| Temporary or new offices |
| In residences wireless allows for use of a notebook computer inside or outside the house...work on files and email from the porch, the deck, or next to the pool! | |
| In offices it allows for mobile use of the computer around the facility...no network cable to plug in. Just open your notebook, turn it on, and log onto the network. Even in the conference room! | |
| For expanding offices it allows for easy movement of personnel...no data cabling to re-route, no new holes to cut in the walls. | |
| For manufacturing facilities it allows workshop users to log onto your wired network. All of the office workstations remain on their existing LAN, and the shop users move about as required in the facility and remain on the network. |
To send a help request to DVITS...
Wireless or partially wireless networks are a handy capability to have for some homes and offices. In homes and offices where there is a necessity to move a laptop around frequently and maintain a network connection, wireless networks are essential. For those small offices which are made up of cubicles or where the work situation requires that people move frequently, a wireless network can be the answer to eliminate unnecessary cabling costs. This allows the flexibility to relocate personnel without concern for the costs of making network adjustments. This can be especially helpful when employees are involved in multiple small project teams and they need network connections while they meet. This way they can move among conference rooms and offices while they work on the network at the same time.
A typical wireless PCI card
Partially wireless networks involve conventional wired networks in combination with a number of machines that have wireless network cards with a wireless node on the network. This can be useful in those applications such as insurance offices where a claims adjuster is working on the wired network, except for when she goes out to the parking lot to look at a client’s vehicle to process a damage claim. She can have her notebook computer on the hood or trunk of the car, or in the front seat of the vehicle. This makes it much more convenient to enter the claim data, and it allows the agent the possibility to send the claim from the parking lot. This eliminates the need for time-consuming disconnection and reconnection to the network. Similar convenience can be had for those personnel who handle inventory and parts issues by computer.