cbxweb
Token Black Member
I found this on some site, hopefully it may help someone.
Worried about interference between your 2.4GHz phone and a wireless network? While the two share the same frequency band, there is lots of space for the two system to work together without interfering with each other. For 802.11 series wireless networking products, most experts suggest using wireless channel 11. (All D-Link 802.11b Wireless devices default to channel 6). This frequency is often outside the frequency band of most 2.4GHz phones. Also, in the 802.11b (2.4GHz) standard there are 11 channels to choose from, all but three of those channels are overlapping channels. Channels 1, 6, and 11 are the only non-overlapping channels.
<P ID="signature">
<img src=http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v256/CBXweb/Stupid%20crap/Billboardcopy.png>
http://cbxweb.cjb.net/
the .2% of good music today.</P>
Worried about interference between your 2.4GHz phone and a wireless network? While the two share the same frequency band, there is lots of space for the two system to work together without interfering with each other. For 802.11 series wireless networking products, most experts suggest using wireless channel 11. (All D-Link 802.11b Wireless devices default to channel 6). This frequency is often outside the frequency band of most 2.4GHz phones. Also, in the 802.11b (2.4GHz) standard there are 11 channels to choose from, all but three of those channels are overlapping channels. Channels 1, 6, and 11 are the only non-overlapping channels.
<P ID="signature">
<img src=http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v256/CBXweb/Stupid%20crap/Billboardcopy.png>
http://cbxweb.cjb.net/
the .2% of good music today.</P>