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The Invisible Negotiation Between Your Laptop and the Air

The Invisible Negotiation Between Your Laptop and the Air

via Dev.to TutorialNaz Quadri

The Invisible Negotiation Between Your Laptop and the Air WiFi: Radio Physics, Collision Avoidance, and the Name That Means Nothing Reading time: ~15 minutes You typed a URL into your browser and hit Enter. Before a single byte of your request left your laptop, your WiFi card performed a dance of radio physics, collision avoidance, and cryptographic negotiation that would make a diplomat proud. It listened to the air to make sure nobody else was talking. It picked a random backoff timer in case someone else had the same idea. It encrypted your data with a key derived from a four-way handshake that happened when you first connected. Then it modulated your bits across 52 subcarrier frequencies simultaneously, transmitted them as radio waves, and waited for an acknowledgement -- all in under a millisecond. You saw a webpage load. Here's what actually happened. The Name Means Nothing Let's get this out of the way: WiFi doesn't stand for anything. If I'm found to be wrong the internet is we

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