Just finished a project doing an entire convention center with Xirrus.  Awesome 
results and many more options than Meraki.  I would say that it was one of 
those signature projects that had to happen in a very short schedule and we had 
to provide support for the event.  Onsite engineers stated that it was the most 
boring support event they ever went too.  In the four days that we provided 
turn-up support there wasn't a single issue and only alcolades from the event 
center and attendees.  

We have previously deployed Meraki in large environments as well the Xirrus.  
The Xirrus product is superior in so many ways.  I am not a big fan of cloud 
based network management,  I think as network providers in rapidly changing 
environments there are times when equipment is decommissioned and put on a 
shelf for a rainy day or emergency project,  I don't see that really happening 
with the Meraki model unless you want to keep dumping money into them.  

DSJ

  
Dustin Jurman
CEO
Rapid Systems Corporation 
1211 N. West Shore Blvd. Suite 711
Tampa, FL 33607
Ph: 813-232-4887 
Cell:813-892-7006
http://www.rapidsys.com
"Building Better Infrastructure"  







     

-----Original Message-----
From: Glenn Robuck [mailto:techraving...@gmail.com] 
Sent: Tuesday, November 19, 2013 5:12 PM
To: NANOG
Subject: Re: Meraki

I'm curious if any of you guys have compared Meraki and Xirrus?  We are 
currently in the process of picking new WAPs and have narrowed it down to these 
too.  We are leaning towards Xirrus due to it's modular structure.
 It also has a great user interface.

Anyone else evaluate Xirrus?


On Tue, Nov 19, 2013 at 3:34 PM, Warren Bailey < 
wbai...@satelliteintelligencegroup.com> wrote:

> They give you a free ap for listening to their pitch.. We love them.
> Expensive.. But responsive and responsible.. Which is pretty hard to 
> find in Wi-Fi land. Pretty interface and lots of little bells and whistles..
> They have my vote from what we evaluated (ubnt, Blahblahblah).
>
>
> Sent from my Mobile Device.
>
>
> -------- Original message --------
> From: "Pedersen, Sean" <sean.peder...@usairways.com>
> Date: 11/19/2013 12:00 PM (GMT-09:00)
> To: NANOG <nanog@nanog.org>
> Subject: RE: Meraki
>
>
> I started to look into them for personal and limited small business 
> use, but stopped short when I realized their cloud management platform 
> is subscription-based. Unless I've missed something, you cannot deploy 
> your own internal management platform. It's all licensed through 
> Meraki/Cisco, which means if you lose your Internet connection, you 
> lose management access to your gear. That could be a deal-killer in certain 
> environments.
> Maybe someone with more experience on the platform could correct me there.
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Hank Disuko [mailto:gourmetci...@hotmail.com]
> Sent: Tuesday, November 19, 2013 10:26 AM
> To: NANOG
> Subject: Meraki
>
> Hi folks,
>
> I've traditionally been a Cisco Catalyst shop for my switching gear.
>
> I am doing a significant hardware refresh in one of my offices, which 
> will entail replacing about 20 access switches and a couple core devices.
>  Pretty simple L3 VLAN environment with VRRP/HSRP, on the physical end 
> I have 1G fibre/copper and 10G fibre.  My core switch of choice will 
> likely be the Cat 4500 series.
>
> I'm considering Cisco's Meraki platform for my access layer and I'm 
> looking for deployment stories of folks that have deployed Meraki in 
> the past...good/bad/ugly kinda stuff.
>
> I know Meraki hardcores were upset when Cisco acquired them, but not 
> exactly sure why.
>
> Anyway, any thoughts would be useful.  Thanks!
>
> -Hank
>
>
>


Reply via email to