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Three tools to pinpoint rogue access points

o C.J. Mathias
06.08.2012 kl 13:40 | Network World (US)

Locating and tracking an object via radio waves has been in everyday use since the WWII invention of RADAR (Radio Detection And Ranging). Today, everybody from automobile drivers to airline pilots to mapmakers to construction professionals rely on GPS, another form of radio-based location and tracking.

 

Locating and tracking an object via radio waves has been in everyday use since the WWII invention of RADAR (Radio Detection And Ranging). Today, everybody from automobile drivers to airline pilots to mapmakers to construction professionals rely on GPS, another form of radio-based location and tracking.

It's unfortunate that GPS doesn't work indoors because indoor location and tracking is becoming essential in fields as diverse as manufacturing, logistics, transportation, healthcare, education and retail. Plus, there are emerging opportunities such as location-based services (LBS) - finding, for example, the nearest printer, item on store shelves, or defibrillator, just for starters.

Given the increasing presence (and, we believe, eventual ubiquity) of Wi-Fi systems across the enterprise, and the growing potential for Wi-Fi-based location and tracking services, we decided to try out a few of the leading products in an effort to better understand the capabilities and limitations of today's offerings, and to do a little comparative analysis with as level a playing field as possible.

Keywords: Networking  Consumer Electronics  
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