Question
You’re connecting your access point and it’s set to root. What does the extended service set ID mean?
Group of answer choices
That you have multiple access points, but one is a repeater access point
That you have multiple access points, but they are placed physically in different buildings
That you have more than one access point and they are in separate SSIDs connected by a distribution system
That you have more than one access point and they are in the same SSID connected by a distribution system
Group of answer choices
That you have multiple access points, but one is a repeater access point
That you have multiple access points, but they are placed physically in different buildings
That you have more than one access point and they are in separate SSIDs connected by a distribution system
That you have more than one access point and they are in the same SSID connected by a distribution system
Answers
GPT-4o mini
The correct answer is:
**That you have more than one access point and they are in the same SSID connected by a distribution system.**
An Extended Service Set (ESS) refers to a set of multiple access points (APs) that share the same Service Set Identifier (SSID) and are interconnected via a distribution system, allowing clients to move seamlessly between the APs within the same network.
**That you have more than one access point and they are in the same SSID connected by a distribution system.**
An Extended Service Set (ESS) refers to a set of multiple access points (APs) that share the same Service Set Identifier (SSID) and are interconnected via a distribution system, allowing clients to move seamlessly between the APs within the same network.