I'm not sure if you need to put your insititueion SSID's on there. If you
don't, why not just run a home wifi solution designed for a large house?
https://www.pcmag.com/roundup/350795/the-best-wi-fi-mesh-network-systems
On Fri, May 4, 2018 at 5:13 PM, Chris Toth wrote:
>
Since I recognize your area codes, have either of you checked out NERCOMP?
https://nercomp.org/
I'm pretty sure they have templates as well
On Thu, Mar 1, 2018 at 11:06 AM, Jeffrey D. Sessler wrote:
> If you are a member of Gartner or other similar service, they have
>
It's been 10 years since I touched FreeRADIUS. But maybe this is still
true?
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/906305
On Wed, Jan 17, 2018 at 11:16 AM, Trinklein, Jason R
wrote:
> We have been having issues with various user devices not prompting for new
> passwords after
Jeff, I'm semi-seriously picking a fight over this statement.
I get what you mean about cutting edge. They are choosing the bleeding
edge. But how can you reconcile that with if you want to the new access
point we're selling, you have to run X? IE, Cisco still recommends on
it's website
I don't know if anyone is doing this, but I was proposed by a VAR about 10
years ago to put highly directional antenna's in the bottom and the top of
the elevator shafts, with the connector cable coming back to a "safe to
work in" room. It does depend on the size of the elevator shaft (at the
So I saw this on Reddit this morning. What do you guys think of this?
https://www.reddit.com/r/LifeProTips/comments/74jt7s/lpt_if_youre_in_student_halls_campus_or_hotel/
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Just another comment that solar might not be the best application.
I see in the archives you run Cisco.
Cisco has a whole line of outdoor Mesh AP's, that mount on streetlgihts,
and tap the power from the streetlight. You unscrew the solar eye (the
thing that turns the light off during the day)
Most UPS companies offer service contracts on the larger UPS (Symmetry line
from APC is one example). That's what I think they were asking about.
IE, If your putting cheap throwaway UPS's in there, is it worth having a
service contract.
I think it comes down to how you utilize your network. If
Marcelo,
If windows 7 is just 4%, what is your highest percentage? Windows 10, or
something else?
On Mon, Jul 10, 2017 at 5:36 PM, Marcelo Maraboli
wrote:
> Hello David
>
> we did this last month and "secured" PEAP by minimizing the risk in
> Windows 7 clients.
>
> We
I'm pretty sure you will need the Private key.
On Mon, Mar 20, 2017 at 12:34 PM, Eric Glinsky <
eglin...@woodstockacademy.org> wrote:
> Thanks for the info, guys! It seems that “it is what it is” after all.
>
>
>
> Still haven’t had a chance to try the third-party CA with Win7 to decide
> if
On Wed, Feb 22, 2017 at 3:21 PM, Coehoorn, Joel wrote:
> Even that won't make sense until handset support is in more than just a
> few devices, though the current Apple/Samsung hegemony means the right
> device could tip that scale faster than we expect. I'm also curious if
Frank,
I'm not sure what your program is trying to accomplish, but I have had in a
program in the past utilizing an ixia veriwave.
https://www.ixiacom.com/products/ixveriwave
Essential it's all based around Faraday Cages, and specialized equipment to
monitor, modulate, and generate RF signals in
Nope. For a minute I thought it was similar to Philip's Connected lighting
(http://www.usa.lighting.philips.com/systems/connected-lighting.html). But
that use case is a PoE light buib that is also a sensor.
I've never seen someone embedding AP's into lighting fixtures.
On Tue, Jan 10, 2017 at
Way back in the dark ages of Server 2003, Microsoft changed NTLM behavior.
It would not surprise me if they changed something again.
Any ways, take a look at this:
https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/kb/906305
Figure out if has any effect on the behavior.
Mike
On Tue, Nov 1, 2016 at 1:25 PM,
My German colleague was quick to point out that "mist" in German means
"crap"
On Wed, Jun 29, 2016 at 10:10 AM, Bob Brown wrote:
> Thought this might be of interest, regarding a new Wifi/Bluetooth Low
> Energy vendor whose leaders come from Cisco (a couple by way of the
>
Been a long time since these type of questions came up.
Summary of Idea's I've heard over the years:
- Mounting the AP in-car,
- Standard Ethernet but I think you'd probably be limited to 3
stories or so (and need special cable)
- DSL or LongReach ethernet to In-car, to AP in
Actually, buried in the bug report is this:
I suspect that you all are hitting this issue because the new version
of Android is now negotiating, correctly, with TLS 1.2 and you have a
broken backend.
If so, this issue should be marked as being invalid.
This applies to anybody with
Quote from the article:
T-Mobile wrote. Qualcomm said its testing
http://apps.fcc.gov/ecfs/document/view?id=60001104452 shows that Wi-Fi
access points often have better throughput when sharing a channel with
LTE-U than when sharing a channel with another Wi-Fi access point.
Here's my comment:
In the local news today.
http://www.whdh.com/story/29873525/parents-say-schools-wi-fi-signal-making-son-sick
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I know it's two weeks later, but Smart Holdings just got smacked by the FCC
for the same thing. (Which is probably why you were asking)
Eric,
It's been a little while since I've bumped into this, but did you use the
correct name for your certificate, and was it a server certificate? I think
the name had to be the radius servers name.
On Tue, Mar 17, 2015 at 10:43 AM, Eric T. Barnett ebarn...@astate.edu
wrote:
We’re running
Lee,
Here's a bit of the opposition.
Search for products with Glass in the name:
https://www.wi-fi.org/product-finder-results?sort_by=defaultsort_order=desckeywords=glass
Zero hits
Search for products with Google in the name:
While Matt O'Brien touched on it.. I just wanted to point this out.
The Cisco outdoor AP line has always had a streetlight tap, for the 1530
series, it's AIR-PWR-ST-LT-R3P=
You remove the photocell off the streetlight, this plugs into the photocell
socket, and then the photocell is plugged into
In my experience, I've only had two instances of damage. Both in the
Freshman dorm, both almost 10 years ago. The first instance of damage we
used Enterasys Roamabout 2 (R2) access points, it was an AP that you
actually stuck a PCMICA card in. (It was a selling feature, where later,
802.11g and
Yes.
You looking for whole building solutions, or single room stuff?
Lutron runs in the 434Mhz band, so non-interference is a given.
http://www.lutron.com/
http://digital.turn-page.com/t/23303/75
Not sure about sound... What are you trying to do?
On Tue, Sep 30, 2014 at 10:11 AM, Lee H
I had a fluke tool that did this.
Visiting the Fluke homepage points me that my old tool is discontinued, and
this is the new tool
http://www.flukenetworks.com/enterprise-network/network-testing/OneTouch-AT-Network-Assistant
Specifically, states:
Power over Ethernet (PoE)Single ended testing:
Let's see how the mailing list treats this:
http://www.riders4helmets.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/01/mouseinhelmet1.jpg
On Mon, Aug 18, 2014 at 9:22 AM, Danny Eaton dannyea...@rice.edu wrote:
Early bird gets the worm but second mouse gets the cheese...
I'll put it in my lab.
That was actually the article I was trying to find last night, but gave
up...
On Thu, Jul 24, 2014 at 11:10 PM, James Andrewartha
jandrewar...@ccgs.wa.edu.au wrote:
On 25/07/14 10:55, Mike King wrote:
There is an interesting developments coming on Chromecast.
From the chromecast blog
Unrelated to your question, but I have a comment:
The local AAA baseball team uses one during games. There is a noticable 2
second lag. Especially apparent since they use it to put interviews and
announcers on the screen, and it's aways 2 seconds out of sync with sound.
Hopefully the unit your
Do you have a packet capture?
I know that (your Step 5) when a client sends a DISCOVER, it can request
it's old address. You're using DHCP proxy, so it's definitely looking at
the packets. Could that be it?
Mike
On Tue, Apr 8, 2014 at 8:37 PM, Koprowski, Gregory John
kopro...@uwec.eduwrote:
My interpretation of that RFC (Thanks hadn't seen that one before) is that
it is essentially reserved for Server Providers (Carriers). This would
exclude most of the users of this list from using it. Also, it seems that
if Customers would adopt this address space, they would be causing
I saw he covered it in his Podcast this morning, but I didn't have the 90
minutes to listen to it to find where he mentioned it.
I did see his twitter comment that it read like a student with a Term paper
due.
Mike
On Wed, Mar 26, 2014 at 12:46 PM, Mike Albano mike.alb...@unlv.edu wrote:
Cisco has a really nice Whitepaper on this:
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/prod/collateral/wireless/ps5678/ps11983/white_paper_c11-713103.html
And revolution wifi has a nice one on Channel Planning
http://www.revolutionwifi.net/2013/03/80211ac-channel-planning.html
Some Snippets:
2.3.4 RTS/CTS with
Lee,
Did you ever get a resolution to this?
Mike
On Tue, Aug 27, 2013 at 12:11 PM, Lee H Badman lhbad...@syr.edu wrote:
Today, after several days of no-problem ramping up to full strength on
our large WLAN 7.4.110 environment, we had two fleeting spates of
disruption in the authentication
Oh? Which one? I was only aware of the Iphone doing 802.11r.
Mike
On Fri, Dec 13, 2013 at 7:39 AM, Jennifer Francis Wilson
jfwils...@uclan.ac.uk wrote:
Granted, but then you have to try and explain to senior management that
most Android phones don't even do Fast roaming (I only know of
My Bad. I guess the Wi-FI alliance branded it Hotspot 2.0
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hotspot_(Wi-Fi)#Hotspot_2.0
On Wed, Nov 20, 2013 at 9:00 PM, Mike King m...@mpking.com wrote:
You mean, something like 802.11u?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IEEE_802.11u
On Wed, Nov 20, 2013 at 3:18
You mean, something like 802.11u?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IEEE_802.11u
On Wed, Nov 20, 2013 at 3:18 PM, Turner, Ryan H rhtur...@email.unc.eduwrote:
Not to mention, these are still authentication AND encryption mechanisms,
not just encryption. I think the original poster was wanting
I've been asked to set up two access points for a charity, and I've come to
the realization I've never configured Cisco IOS AP, only the WLC models.
What I'm fishing for is deployment Idea's, with the use case of nobody
technical is going to manage these things, unless they get another
volunteer.
-Original Message-
From: Mike King
Sent: 01-11-2013, 19:26
To: WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU
Subject: [WIRELESS-LAN] Cisco IOS Access points
I've been asked to set up two access points for a charity, and I've come
to the realization I've never configured Cisco IOS AP, only
http://www.cisco.com/web/tsweb/pdf/Software-research-at-a-glance.pdf
Looks like system is putting a system into place to Recommend versions of
code.
I'm looking forward to what they suggest when they get around to adding the
wireless lan controllers. (When I looked, it only had the switch based
Anyone catch this?
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/docs/security/ise/1.2/release_notes/ise12_rn.html#wp69187
Apparently ISE server includes a client on-boarding application.
Mike
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Bruce,
Did you guys go all the way and enable 802.11r as well? (Make - before -
break roaming)
If you did, did you have any older device's not tolerate the changes to the
TLV's?
Mike
On Mon, Sep 16, 2013 at 5:57 PM, Curtis, Bruce bruce.cur...@ndsu.eduwrote:
On Sep 16, 2013, at 4:32 PM, Eric
I still get a kick out of this 3 years later, and it's appropriate for this
conversation, especially with the controller Brickwall comment.
http://www.aerohive.com/isc
(Note for those without a sense of humor This was uploaded by Aerohive on
April 1st, 2010)
Mike
On Wed, Sep 11, 2013 at 9:44
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chromecast#DIAL_protocol
On Tue, Sep 10, 2013 at 7:41 AM, Julian Y Koh kohs...@northwestern.eduwrote:
On Aug 24, 2013, at 15:04 , Adam Forsyth forsy...@luther.edu wrote:
Moving from the realm of technological problems to people problems, I
think students may
On the same vein, Has anyone tried zero clients and VDI infrastructure
instead of computers in a renovation?
On Fri, Aug 23, 2013 at 11:03 AM, Eric T. Barnett ebarn...@astate.eduwrote:
This is great! Please keep up with the information!
** **
To sum up, it looks like the idea of no
It might be too late in the game, but have you suggested working With You
instead of around you?
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/ps11615/index.html
The 802.11a/b/g/n 2X3 MIMO built-in Cisco 3500 Access Point (AP) in the
Cisco 819, comes with Cisco's CleanAir technology, to create a
Don't forget.
Meraki is Cisco.
They bought them, but running them as an independent unit.
Cisco also has they're Flex controller, which is a similar model.
I haven't seen any other vendor with Aerohive's model. I haven't used it,
just sat through a few sales presentations. But from what I've
Hi Jeff.
You should be fine:
http://www.ntia.doc.gov/files/ntia/publications/2003-allochrt.pdf
It's very far away from the 2.4 and 5 Ghz bands that wireless runs on.
On Fri, Apr 5, 2013 at 11:32 AM, Jeff Fleischman jf2...@columbia.eduwrote:
All,
Our facilities department is planning a
, Mike King m...@mpking.com wrote:
Hi Jeff.
You should be fine:
http://www.ntia.doc.gov/files/ntia/publications/2003-allochrt.pdf
It's very far away from the 2.4 and 5 Ghz bands that wireless runs on.
On Fri, Apr 5, 2013 at 11:32 AM, Jeff Fleischman jf2...@columbia.eduwrote:
All,
Our
Unfortuantly Craig, I think they're looking for a bit more.
This USER on this COMPUTER is authorized. Not two separate transaction,
but one single transaction.
Matt,
Yes this is a little unique I think, but not out of the park weird.
I don't have a NPS server near me, but Matt, if you look at
Just a point I have from the past.
WPA + TKIP was only intended as a workaround until WPA2 was ratified.
That being said, here is a paraphrased note I have from a
wireless engineer:
Only WPA-tkip wpa2-aes are tested certified as part of the Wif-Fi
alliance certification. Enabling both mode is
Sorry, I just read that note again, I thought it covered wpa2-tkip and
wpa-aes, but I was mistaken.
On Thu, Jan 24, 2013 at 2:53 PM, Mike King m...@mpking.com wrote:
Just a point I have from the past.
WPA + TKIP was only intended as a workaround until WPA2 was ratified.
That being said
Ekahau has GPS assisted survey
http://www.ekahau.com/products/ekahau-site-survey/overview.html
I've used it to map our outdoor Wifi deployment.
You need a GPS, and you need to be a bit careful on how you collect your
results. Driving 30MPH inside a car did not necessarily equate to walking
Here's a screen shot from one I did previous to our outdoor deployment
http://www.mpking.com/file/CampusSurvey.png
(Only one I can find right now)
On Tue, Nov 13, 2012 at 1:43 PM, Mike King m...@mpking.com wrote:
Ekahau has GPS assisted survey
http://www.ekahau.com/products/ekahau-site-survey
Your going to Cancun, Lee?
I'm hoping to make it out to Orlando for Cisco Live next June.
Mike
On Fri, Nov 2, 2012 at 9:44 PM, Lee H Badman lhbad...@syr.edu wrote:
I will be at Cisco Live, but wish you all a good meeting and kind regards.
-Lee Badman
On Nov 2, 2012, at 19:25, Hanset,
You know Lee,
There is an email from you on August 30th saying your're not seeing this
problem. Go Figure.
Danny, here's the info from the list archive:
Just as an FYI for those running Cisco, I noticed today that 7.0.235.3 was
released on Sep 11 2012 for both 4400 series and 5508 series
Just to expand on Bruce's comment.
That posting references Android Cupcake, version 1.5, with a note that it
was fixed in Android Donut, version 1.6
Android has been extremely stable on WPA2-Enterprise since 2.3 (and later
versions of 2.2).
What's your Wireless infrastructure, and how do you
Samsung must have heard your pain.
http://www.engadget.com/2012/08/29/samsung-ek-gc100-galaxy-camera-hands-on/
On Wed, Sep 12, 2012 at 7:52 PM, Curtis K. Larsen
curtis.k.lar...@utah.eduwrote:
Hello,
I am wondering if anyone has come across a solution similar to EyeFi Cards
for cameras,
I had a TAC case this week where the engineer recommended disabling Aironet
IE. He said some non- CCX clients have issues with it.
We're debating it internally now if we should or not. About all we can
find that it does is provide the access point name to CCX clients
Mike
On Fri, Jul 27, 2012
On Thu, Jul 26, 2012 at 3:01 PM, Eric T. Barnett ebarn...@astate.eduwrote:
My biggest problem with using just the multicast VLAN setting was that I
had to keep resetting the Airplay on the AppleTVs to see them. For some
reason, their advertisements only worked for a short period of time.
That is a current document. The webex is about a new controller release
7.4, which is supposed to have a bonjour gateway in it. (It might be avahai
under the covers on controller)
On Jul 20, 2012 10:26 AM, John York yo...@brcc.edu wrote:
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To answer your second question:
2) You can use Avahi or Cisco's upcoming controller-based version of it
such that you can use vlan select without specifying a single vlan for
downstream multicast traffic. This way you have two-way traffic via the
gateway on all subnets.
No information
Wyatt,
Do you have Fast SSID enabled?
Mike
On Thu, Jul 19, 2012 at 2:16 PM, Wyatt Schill wsch...@greenriver.eduwrote:
Is it broken on the WISM2s? I am on a 5508 with 7.2.110.0 and switching
between web-auth ssid’s is broken, but staying on a single web-auth works
fine. Still waiting on a
using a single Multicast VLAN
(part of VLAN select).
Jeff
On Tuesday, July 03, 2012 at 6:06 AM, in message
CANtPpk420_nAraEeOqnC=d6ckj2ujkk+=t5_hsu0q4_jxrc...@mail.gmail.com, Mike
King m...@mpking.com wrote:
So I have Cisco Wireless, and I've just been asked to make
One more thing.
I think use of an online petition tool might help things
out organizationally.
http://www.change.org/petition
there are others, that was the first Google result.
Mike
On Thu, Jul 5, 2012 at 5:12 PM, Lee H Badman lhbad...@syr.edu wrote:
So... two thoughts. Perhaps give it
So according to *many* release notes, I've found the following.
If you have a FlexConnect access point, your controller must be set to
Multicast-Unicast mode in order for the Flexconnect to get the multicast
traffic from the central controller.
I have an interesting corner case, that I'm
Anyone know what version of IGMP is supported on a Cisco WLC 5508?
Mike
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What are those, the R2's?
On Jun 9, 2012 3:03 PM, jkaf...@utica.edu jkaf...@utica.edu wrote:
We are running Enterasys and I'm very happy. Upgrades are smooth and
clear without any gotchas. Their support for legacy harware is crazy. We
are still running APs purchased in 2003 with full
They're welcome to if they want to.
I generally will throw out a notice because Cisco's Notification engine of
software upgrades is a bit difficult to use, and figure not everyone
knows that an update came out.
Mike
On Thu, Jun 7, 2012 at 7:40 AM, Osborne, Bruce W bosbo...@liberty.eduwrote:
Wolrd IPV6 Day is this Wednesday.
http://news.cnet.com/8301-1001_3-57445316-92/internet-powers-flip-the-ipv6-switch-faq/?tag=mncol;morePosts
The big change is that they aren't shutting it off after the test.
We're making / expecting no changes for Wednesday, as we're still taking
the head in the
We're piloting a VDI deployment, and I just got blindsided by my server
team. I'm looking for some ideas.
The VDI deployment has been sold to management with location based
printing. It slices, It dices, It knows where you are and will select the
appropriate printer for you
This works all well
I had a conversation with sales at an executive briefing, and they
mentioned that the option of a 10gig addon module (far right hand side of
the front) was being considered.
Granted, this was a sales person, and no NDA was signed, so I'm not sure
how much stock I put in it.
Mike
On Tue, May 1,
We're still investigating EAP-TLS.
We're also now looking at going VDI, and repurposing alot of laptops using
ThinPC. (It's exactly the same as Windows 7 embedded)
Anyone doing EAP-TLS with an embedded client OS? (XP Embedded, Windows
Embedded 2009, Windows Embedded 7, Windows Embedded 8)
I think if you see 1000 AP's on a controller, they would most likely be in
HREAP mode. Controller failure wouldn't affect that.
Mike
On Thu, Feb 2, 2012 at 4:10 PM, Danny Eaton dannyea...@rice.edu wrote:
Does anyone else have heartburn about putting 500 (or in the future 1,000)
APs on a
I haven't followed this in awhile, but the geograhics lab at Bridgewater
State University looks like there still doing this:
http://geolabvirtualmaps.com/
I they were using custom built equipment to do this, but were thinking of
transitioning to off the shelf stuff the last time I talked to
Dan Brisson
Network Engineer
University of Vermont
(Ph) 802.656.8111dbris...@uvm.edu
On 2/1/2012 10:23 AM, Mike King wrote:
On Wed, Feb 1, 2012 at 10:03 AM, Dan Brisson dbris...@uvm.edu wrote:
It's been awhile since I've read these, but If I interpret this
correctly, It took 1m 15s
Anyone have 40 to 50 Cisco AP power adapters for Cisco 1131 Access points
they don't want. The AP shipped with the AIR-PWR-A, which has been
replaced with the AIR-PWR-B.
We're getting ready to trial out doing Office Extend with some older AP's
we've pulled out and replaced with N access points.
Looks like it's time to upgrade for me.
http://www.cisco.com/web/software/Wireless/Deferral/Deferral_Notice_7_0_98_0.html
*Wireless Control System (WCS) software version 7.0.98.0 is being deferred
due to the following issue :*
* **CSCtj21464 - WLC data plane core crashes, causing WLC reboot*
I can't find the direct quote. I can find the mission statement that is
directly related to it:
http://www.google.com/fiber/kansascity/about.html
But a project manager invovled with the Google Fiber Project (Gigabit
access to the home in Kansas City) had a quote along the lines of:
When
Off topic question, but I get the feeling there are multiple hat guys
and gals on this list.
We're switching out all of our routing gear, and we now have the
opportunity to utilize the reference bandwidth statement. (Cisco ASA's
don't support it, among many other things)
So what reference
Just got notification of a new Software release on the WLC for Cisco.
I checked the website, and it looks like two releases were shipped out.
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/ps10315/prod_release_notes_list.html
7.0.220.0
and
7.1.91.0
Interesting points to notice,
7.0.220.0 is the end of
Not exactly too surprising. I've have a few enterprising students
broadcasting some stuff from there dorm rooms via multicast (Wired for us).
I can imagine if it worked, they'd use it.
Mike
On Thu, Oct 27, 2011 at 9:31 PM, Ghere, Shayne sgh...@bumail.bradley.eduwrote:
One thing we did
I agree with contacting your Cisco Team.
Back 2005 we opened with a showshopper. We had a bug that basically caused
an Access Point to reboot when more than 20 users were associated. Caused a
cascade failure, as each access point was knocked down, it caused more users
to associated to others,
While we're talking about NPS and regex, just one note to be aware of.
When you make a connection policy, and your matching multiple IP addresses,
you might be tempted to use the following terminology.
10.1.2.1|10.1.2.2|10.1.2.3
However, be aware that it uses REGEX in the connection policies as
I think Legacy Licenses was a specific type of license for customers for
when WCS switched to the PLUS and the BASE designations. If you notice it
says end of sale 2009.
I don't there there is a published EOS/EOL yet.
On Wed, Oct 5, 2011 at 3:29 PM, Michael Cole mc...@clarku.edu wrote:
The
I can confirm Juniper does it.
On Tue, Sep 20, 2011 at 5:47 PM, Heath Barnhart heath.barnh...@washburn.edu
wrote:
Most enterprise class equipment (Cisco, Brocade, etc) come with
dhcp-snooping standard now. Not sure about Juniper, and I think I heard the
HP does it.
I have DHCP-Snooping up
Nick, I've used both NPS (New RADIUS server from Microsoft) and IAS. What
you want to do is Extremely simple.
FYI:
Do NOT under any circumstances roll out a new SSID using WPA. Use WPA2.
I have 3 SSID's that go back to the same RADIUS server.
Is there anything special you want to do? Limit
Yes.
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/docs/wireless/technology/mesh/7.0/design/guide/MeshAP_70.html#wp1024888
. Complete interoperability of indoor mesh access points with the
outdoor ones is supported to have coverage from outdoors into the indoors.
We recommend 1100 series for indoor use only,
) is not supported on mesh access
points.
On Thu, Sep 15, 2011 at 10:39 PM, Mike King m...@mpking.com wrote:
Yes.
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/docs/wireless/technology/mesh/7.0/design/guide/MeshAP_70.html#wp1024888
. Complete interoperability of indoor mesh access points with the
outdoor ones
I've done it. I've had mixed results, both aesthetics and performance wise.
You should find out the composition of the glass, as there are
many varieties that are extremely difficult for Wireless to penetrate.
Mike
On Thu, Sep 15, 2011 at 6:08 PM, Branden Kirk branden.k...@biola.eduwrote:
The funny part about this article, Merikai is consistently horrible.
On Wed, Aug 17, 2011 at 9:19 AM, Mike King m...@mpking.com wrote:
I'm thinking the Unfiltered version is this one?
http://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/wi-fi-performance,2985.html
(Which also references this article
The real short answer is that it does not matter what the IP address of the
AP is, as long as it has good stable communications with the controller.
What I personally try to do is what you are proposing, put the APs for each
building/floor it's own subnet.
Good luck
Mike
On Wed, Jun 8, 2011 at
On Fri, Jun 3, 2011 at 2:23 PM, Holland, Stephen s.holl...@neu.edu wrote:
Just catching up and saw your email. I'm in the process of switching
certificates out next week. Most clients we tested upgraded ok but look out
for Droids at 2.2 code. When we tested Droids at this release changing the
Sorry, Just have to Threadjack for a second.
On Wed, Jun 1, 2011 at 6:53 PM, Hanset, Philippe C phan...@utk.edu wrote:
This is on an open SSID with NetReg in the back end. No portal, no 802.1x.
Philippe
NetReg? Southwestern, or CMU? (I was heavily into NetReg Southwestern back
in the
I'm not at the campus that I hung Cisco 1505's on poles anymore, but I drive
by it everyday, and they are still there.
We were an early beta for the Airespace 1300's (Now Cisco 1505's), but the
mounting hardware doesn't change much.
There was a large aluminum bracket that mounted on the pole
Anyone running 7.0.116.0, have you played with the Office Extend Feature?
I've had a NAT bug filed against it, and it states that it's resolved in
7.0.116.0, but has not further details. (It's classified as a bug, but it
was more of a design defect, and I'm wondering how they fixed it.)
On Mon,
Ben,
Do you have your workstations configured to allow Computer Account logon's
to wireless? (I.E., does the machine have connectivity while it's sitting
at the CTRL-ALT-DEL prompt)
Mike
On Wed, Apr 6, 2011 at 10:24 AM, Benjamin Stewart
bstew...@salemstate.eduwrote:
Hi-
I’m wondering if
@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU] *On Behalf Of *Mike King
*Sent:* Wednesday, April 06, 2011 11:56 AM
*To:* WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU
*Subject:* Re: [WIRELESS-LAN] GPO Software Deployment 802.1x
Ben,
Do you have your workstations configured to allow Computer Account logon's
to wireless
I've got about 90 1131's / 1142n's on Juniper EX4200's, no issues. It's all
standard 802.3af.
I just checked the spec on the AP3500 (which is the only Clean Air
Accesspoint that I'm aware of at the moment) and it's listed as a
802.3af device.
As a plus, the EX4200 with the large power supply
--
*From:* The EDUCAUSE Wireless Issues Constituent Group Listserv [mailto:
WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU] *On Behalf Of *Mike King
*Sent:* Tuesday, March 29, 2011 9:56 AM
*To:* WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU
*Subject:* Re: [WIRELESS-LAN] Running WLC-LWAPP
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