Editing Wifi power saving mode

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Because using PSM introduces extra latency for incoming packets, the tablets try to optimize performance by remaining in Constant Active Mode (CAM) if there is constant traffic. On the other hand, CAM consumes a lot of power, so the timeout should be as short as possible. For more detailed description, see [http://lists.maemo.org/pipermail/maemo-users/2008-July/011430.html this posting on the subject].
Because using PSM introduces extra latency for incoming packets, the tablets try to optimize performance by remaining in Constant Active Mode (CAM) if there is constant traffic. On the other hand, CAM consumes a lot of power, so the timeout should be as short as possible. For more detailed description, see [http://lists.maemo.org/pipermail/maemo-users/2008-July/011430.html this posting on the subject].
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== How it works ==
 
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E.G. http://features.techworld.com/mobile-wireless/4103/a-guide-to-wi-fi-power-save-technologies/ explains:
 
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'''Power Save Mode (PSM).''' This is the original power-conservation technique defined in 802.11, and was tested in this article. The methodology is for the mobile device to suspend radio activity after a variable but pre-determined (by the vendor) period of inactivity, and then wake up periodically (usually about three ''beacon frames'', which are normally 100 ms each) to see if the infrastructure has queued any traffic for it.
 
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Some AccessPoints allow to configure beacon rate and the number of beacons to pass by before the client wakes up again (a parameter that gets negotiated between AP and client)
 
== Issues ==
== Issues ==

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