I haven’t seen a table like this one before. It shows all the 802.11 working groups, their designated letter, and what they are workingon.
<p><font size="2"><b>Table 1: Current 802.11 Working Groups at the IEEE</b></font>
<p>
<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="1">
| 802.11 Specification letter suffix |
What it does |
| e |
<td valign="top" align="left"><font size="2">Adds quality of service features, multimedia support</font></td>
| f |
Defining how access points interact |
<td valign="top" align="left"><font size="2">g</font></td>
<td valign="top" align="left"><font size="2">Ups data transfer rates on 2.4GHz band to 54 Mbit/s</font></td>
| h |
Adding dynamic frequency selection to 802.11a to comply with European regulations |
| i |
Security upgrade |
| j |
A version of 802.11a for Japan that will run on the authorized 4.9GHz-5GHz frequencies |
| k |
Defines radio and network information to allow the better management of wireless LANs, will also enable new applications like location-based services |
| l |
<td valign="top" align="left"><font size="2">Not being used, because it looks confusing</font></td>
| m |
Maintenance, this working group will go back and correct any errors in previous ammendents to the specification |
<td valign="top" align="left"><font size="2">n</font></td>
<td valign="top" align="left"><font size="2">Not official yet but likely to be the designation of a high-throughput variant of the standard.</font></td>
| o |
Not being used, because it looks confusing |
|
Unstrung - The world wide source for analysis of the global wireless economy