RE: [WISPA] Virtual AP

2005-12-27 Thread Rick Smith

Yep, I create virtual SSIDs for all my competitors names (they only do DSL) :)

I also wholesale service off one of my towers via 2.4 and 900 mhz to a local 
computer guy that likes to see his name "in the air" -
the virtual SSID thing was a natural win...

Not sure about the broadcast thing...haven't seen a performance hit because of 
the virtual ssid's ...
R 

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Pete Davis
Sent: Tuesday, December 27, 2005 9:57 AM
To: WISPA General List
Subject: [WISPA] Virtual AP

Mikrotik APs have the capability to create a "Virtual AP" with a secondary 
SSID, but I haven't found much documentation about it.

Has anyone used this feature much? I could see this being useful during a 
transitional period, while you are changing the SSID, so
you can access the CPE with the "old" ssid.
I could also see this being useful for colocating two companies on the same 
tower/AP, like if you have an ISP geared toward
residential service, and another company name/marketing scheme for business 
customers.
I don't know what kind of performance impact there is when you create a bunch 
of APs on one radio.

I had a wierd thought about this, however: If I have 40 clients on an AP, and 
set up 40 "virtual AP's" on the network with each
client on his own SSID, do they count as 40 PTP links, allowing me to kick up 
the antenna gain like with the CPE?

Does the virtual AP really broadcast a secondary SSID, or does it switch 
between the two rapidly, kind of like a poor man's Time
Division Multiplexing.


Pete Davis
NoDial.net
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Re: [WISPA] Virtual AP

2005-12-27 Thread John Scrivner




I had a wierd thought about this, however: If I have 40 clients on an 
AP, and set up 40 "virtual AP's" on the network with each client on 
his own SSID, do they count as 40 PTP links, allowing me to kick up 
the antenna gain like with the CPE?


The FCC looks at the physical layer for determining what gain you have 
available. Whether or not you can show a packet is destined for only one 
device has no impact of whether or not you are broadcasting power in 
many directions at the same time. They want to see beam forming 
directivity in an AP before they allow the higher power on the AP end. 
All virtual AP firmware I have seen has limit of 8 - VSSIDs which limits 
your ability to segment by SSID.




Does the virtual AP really broadcast a secondary SSID, or does it 
switch between the two rapidly, kind of like a poor man's Time 
Division Multiplexing.


The only time division aspect of the virtual AP is the beacon which is 
sent with a different SSID each broadcast sequentially allowing all CPE 
with any of the SSIDs to see and associate with the AP. This does not 
act like a polling mechanism. Nor does it segment time of availability 
by SSID from what little I know on the subject. It simply allows for 
several different SSID devices to associate and use the AP. One nice 
feature is the ability to set different AP features for each SSID. For 
instance you can have different WEP or other security settings for each 
virtual AP. Nice feature.

Scriv




Pete Davis
NoDial.net


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RE: [WISPA] Virtual AP

2005-12-27 Thread Scott Reed




What happens when a potential customer sees the competition's name? They call the competitor who says, "We don't do that."  Then what, do you get called by the competitor?
I guess my question is, how does advertising the competitor's name help you?

I like the wholesale idea though.  I may have to pursue that in the future.

Scott Reed 


Owner 


NewWays 


Wireless Networking 


Network Design, Installation and Administration 


www.nwwnet.net 


 

The season is Christmas, not X-mas, not the holiday, but Christmas, because 


Christ was born to provide salvation to all who will 
believe!

-- Original Message 
---

From: Rick Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 


To: "'WISPA General List'"  


Sent: Tue, 27 Dec 2005 10:15:08 -0500 


Subject: RE: [WISPA] Virtual AP 



> 

Yep, I create virtual SSIDs for all my competitors names (they only do DSL) :) 

> 
> 

I also wholesale service off one of my towers via 2.4 and 900 mhz to a local 
computer guy that likes to see his name "in the air" - 
> 

the virtual SSID thing was a natural win... 
> 
> 

Not sure about the broadcast thing...haven't seen a performance hit because of 
the virtual ssid's ... 
> 

R  
> 
> 

-Original Message- 
> 

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf 
Of Pete Davis 
> 

Sent: Tuesday, December 27, 2005 9:57 AM 
> 

To: WISPA General List 
> 

Subject: [WISPA] Virtual AP 
> 
> 

Mikrotik APs have the capability to create a "Virtual AP" with a 
secondary SSID, but I haven't found much documentation about it. 
> 

> 

Has anyone used this feature much? I could see this being useful during a 
transitional period, while you are changing the SSID, so 
> 

you can access the CPE with the "old" ssid. 
> 

I could also see this being useful for colocating two companies on the same 
tower/AP, like if you have an ISP geared toward 
> 

residential service, and another company name/marketing scheme for business 
customers. 
> 

I don't know what kind of performance impact there is when you create a bunch of 
APs on one radio. 
> 
> 

I had a wierd thought about this, however: If I have 40 clients on an AP, and 
set up 40 "virtual AP's" on the network with each 
> 

client on his own SSID, do they count as 40 PTP links, allowing me to kick up 
the antenna gain like with the CPE? 
> 
> 

Does the virtual AP really broadcast a secondary SSID, or does it switch between 
the two rapidly, kind of like a poor man's Time 
> 

Division Multiplexing. 
> 
> 

Pete Davis 
> 

NoDial.net 
> 

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Re: [WISPA] Virtual AP

2005-12-27 Thread Butch Evans

On Tue, 27 Dec 2005, John Scrivner wrote:

associate and use the AP. One nice feature is the ability to set 
different AP features for each SSID. For instance you can have 
different WEP or other security settings for each virtual AP. Nice 
feature.


Yes, this is a nice feature.  MT also allows you to have unique WEP 
keys per sub, whether you use virtual APs or not.


--
Butch Evans
BPS Networks  http://www.bpsnetworks.com/
Bernie, MO
Mikrotik Certified Consultant
(http://www.mikrotik.com/consultants.html)
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RE: [WISPA] Virtual AP

2005-12-27 Thread Rick Smith



actually, I was kidding about the competitor thing, wanted 
to see if it'd start a fire.  It's something I'd thought of, but you can't 
route based on Virtual AP SSID
 
Having an invididual hotspot page per virtual SSID would be 
cool, on a wholesale level...


From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Scott 
ReedSent: Tuesday, December 27, 2005 10:44 AMTo: WISPA 
General ListSubject: RE: [WISPA] Virtual AP
What happens when a potential customer sees the 
competition's name? They call the competitor who says, "We don't do that."  
Then what, do you get called by the competitor? I guess my question is, how 
does advertising the competitor's name help you? I like the wholesale 
idea though.  I may have to pursue that in the future. Scott Reed 
Owner NewWays Wireless Networking Network Design, Installation 
and Administration www.nwwnet.net The season is Christmas, not X-mas, not 
the holiday, but Christmas, because Christ was born to provide salvation to 
all who will believe! -- Original Message --- 
From: Rick Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: "'WISPA General List'" 
 Sent: Tue, 27 Dec 2005 10:15:08 -0500 
Subject: RE: [WISPA] Virtual AP > Yep, I create virtual SSIDs for 
all my competitors names (they only do DSL) :) > > I also 
wholesale service off one of my towers via 2.4 and 900 mhz to a local computer 
guy that likes to see his name "in the air" - > the virtual SSID thing 
was a natural win... > > Not sure about the broadcast 
thing...haven't seen a performance hit because of the virtual ssid's ... 
> R > > -Original Message- > From: 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Pete 
Davis > Sent: Tuesday, December 27, 2005 9:57 AM > To: WISPA 
General List > Subject: [WISPA] Virtual AP > > Mikrotik APs 
have the capability to create a "Virtual AP" with a secondary SSID, but I 
haven't found much documentation about it. > > Has anyone used 
this feature much? I could see this being useful during a transitional period, 
while you are changing the SSID, so > you can access the CPE with the 
"old" ssid. > I could also see this being useful for colocating two 
companies on the same tower/AP, like if you have an ISP geared toward > 
residential service, and another company name/marketing scheme for business 
customers. > I don't know what kind of performance impact there is when 
you create a bunch of APs on one radio. > > I had a wierd thought 
about this, however: If I have 40 clients on an AP, and set up 40 "virtual AP's" 
on the network with each > client on his own SSID, do they count as 40 
PTP links, allowing me to kick up the antenna gain like with the CPE? > 
> Does the virtual AP really broadcast a secondary SSID, or does it 
switch between the two rapidly, kind of like a poor man's Time > Division 
Multiplexing. > > Pete Davis > NoDial.net > -- 
> WISPA Wireless List: wireless@wispa.org > > 
Subscribe/Unsubscribe: > http://lists.wispa.org/mailman/listinfo/wireless > 
> Archives: http://lists.wispa.org/pipermail/wireless/ > > 
-- > No virus found in this incoming message. > Checked by AVG 
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Date: 12/23/2005 > > -- > No virus found in this outgoing 
message. > Checked by AVG Free Edition. > Version: 7.1.371 / Virus 
Database: 267.14.7/214 - Release Date: 12/23/2005 > > -- > 
WISPA Wireless List: wireless@wispa.org > > Subscribe/Unsubscribe: 
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of Original Message --- 
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12/23/2005



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RE: [WISPA] Virtual AP

2005-12-27 Thread Kurt Fankhauser









I do that too, 3 competitors have towers
all within ¼ mile of each other, I put their ssid in my AP but turn the
broadcast off, their clients associate to me and I deny all their access so
when they try to hook up customers it looks like their connected but they cant
figure out why it doesn’t work, keeps them from signing up clients in my area.

 



Kurt Fankhauser

WAVELINC

114 S. Walnut St.

Bucyrus, OH 44820

419-562-6405

www.wavelinc.com



 

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf
Of Rick Smith
Sent: Tuesday, December 27, 2005
8:12 AM
To: 'WISPA General List'
Subject: RE: [WISPA] Virtual AP

 

actually, I was kidding
about the competitor thing, wanted to see if it'd start a fire.  It's
something I'd thought of, but you can't route based on Virtual AP SSID

 

Having an invididual
hotspot page per virtual SSID would be cool, on a wholesale level...

 







From:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Scott Reed
Sent: Tuesday, December 27, 2005
10:44 AM
To: WISPA General List
Subject: RE: [WISPA] Virtual AP

What happens when a potential customer sees the
competition's name? They call the competitor who says, "We don't do
that."  Then what, do you get called by the competitor? 
I guess my question is, how does advertising the competitor's name help you? 

I like the wholesale idea though.  I may have to pursue that in the
future. 

Scott Reed 
Owner 
NewWays 
Wireless Networking 
Network Design, Installation and Administration 
www.nwwnet.net 

The season is Christmas, not X-mas, not the holiday, but Christmas, because 
Christ was born to provide salvation to all who will believe! 

-- Original Message ---

From: Rick Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
To: "'WISPA General List'"  
Sent: Tue, 27 Dec 2005 10:15:08 -0500 
Subject: RE: [WISPA] Virtual AP 

> Yep, I create virtual SSIDs for all my competitors names (they only do
DSL) :) 
> 
> I also wholesale service off one of my towers via 2.4 and 900 mhz to a
local computer guy that likes to see his name "in the air" - 
> the virtual SSID thing was a natural win... 
> 
> Not sure about the broadcast thing...haven't seen a performance hit
because of the virtual ssid's ... 
> R 
> 
> -Original Message- 
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Pete Davis 
> Sent: Tuesday, December 27, 2005 9:57 AM 
> To: WISPA General List 
> Subject: [WISPA] Virtual AP 
> 
> Mikrotik APs have the capability to create a "Virtual AP" with a
secondary SSID, but I haven't found much documentation about it. 
> 
> Has anyone used this feature much? I could see this being useful during a
transitional period, while you are changing the SSID, so 
> you can access the CPE with the "old" ssid. 
> I could also see this being useful for colocating two companies on the
same tower/AP, like if you have an ISP geared toward 
> residential service, and another company name/marketing scheme for
business customers. 
> I don't know what kind of performance impact there is when you create a
bunch of APs on one radio. 
> 
> I had a wierd thought about this, however: If I have 40 clients on an AP,
and set up 40 "virtual AP's" on the network with each 
> client on his own SSID, do they count as 40 PTP links, allowing me to kick
up the antenna gain like with the CPE? 
> 
> Does the virtual AP really broadcast a secondary SSID, or does it switch
between the two rapidly, kind of like a poor man's Time 
> Division Multiplexing. 
> 
> Pete Davis 
> NoDial.net 
> -- 
> WISPA Wireless List: wireless@wispa.org 
> 
> Subscribe/Unsubscribe: 
> http://lists.wispa.org/mailman/listinfo/wireless

> 
> Archives: http://lists.wispa.org/pipermail/wireless/ 
> 
> -- 
> No virus found in this incoming message. 
> Checked by AVG Free Edition. 
> Version: 7.1.371 / Virus Database: 267.14.7/214 - Release Date: 12/23/2005

> 
> -- 
> No virus found in this outgoing message. 
> Checked by AVG Free Edition. 
> Version: 7.1.371 / Virus Database: 267.14.7/214 - Release Date: 12/23/2005

> 
> -- 
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--- End of Original Message ---


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Re: [WISPA] Virtual AP

2005-12-27 Thread John Scrivner
Short of frustrating potential customers I cannot fathom what positive 
effect this process has. Please enlighten me how this is a good thing to do.

Scriv


Kurt Fankhauser wrote:

I do that too, 3 competitors have towers all within ¼ mile of each 
other, I put their ssid in my AP but turn the broadcast off, their 
clients associate to me and I deny all their access so when they try 
to hook up customers it looks like their connected but they cant 
figure out why it doesn’t work, keeps them from signing up clients in 
my area.


Kurt Fankhauser

WAVELINC

114 S. Walnut St.

Bucyrus, OH 44820

419-562-6405

www.wavelinc.com

-Original Message-
*From:* [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
*On Behalf Of *Rick Smith

*Sent:* Tuesday, December 27, 2005 8:12 AM
*To:* 'WISPA General List'
*Subject:* RE: [WISPA] Virtual AP

actually, I was kidding about the competitor thing, wanted to see if 
it'd start a fire. It's something I'd thought of, but you can't route 
based on Virtual AP SSID


Having an invididual hotspot page per virtual SSID would be cool, on a 
wholesale level...




*From:* [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
*On Behalf Of *Scott Reed

*Sent:* Tuesday, December 27, 2005 10:44 AM
*To:* WISPA General List
*Subject:* RE: [WISPA] Virtual AP

What happens when a potential customer sees the competition's name? 
They call the competitor who says, "We don't do that." Then what, do 
you get called by the competitor?
I guess my question is, how does advertising the competitor's name 
help you?


I like the wholesale idea though. I may have to pursue that in the 
future.


Scott Reed
Owner
NewWays
Wireless Networking
Network Design, Installation and Administration
www.nwwnet.net <http://www.nwwnet.net/>

The season is Christmas, not X-mas, not the holiday, but Christmas, 
because

Christ was born to provide salvation to all who will believe!

*-- Original Message ---*
From: Rick Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "'WISPA General List'" 
Sent: Tue, 27 Dec 2005 10:15:08 -0500
Subject: RE: [WISPA] Virtual AP

Yep, I create virtual SSIDs for all my competitors names (they only 

do DSL) :)


I also wholesale service off one of my towers via 2.4 and 900 mhz to 

a local computer guy that likes to see his name "in the air" -

the virtual SSID thing was a natural win...

Not sure about the broadcast thing...haven't seen a performance hit 

because of the virtual ssid's ...

R

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 

On Behalf Of Pete Davis

Sent: Tuesday, December 27, 2005 9:57 AM
To: WISPA General List
Subject: [WISPA] Virtual AP

Mikrotik APs have the capability to create a "Virtual AP" with a 

secondary SSID, but I haven't found much documentation about it.


Has anyone used this feature much? I could see this being useful 

during a transitional period, while you are changing the SSID, so

you can access the CPE with the "old" ssid.
I could also see this being useful for colocating two companies on 

the same tower/AP, like if you have an ISP geared toward
residential service, and another company name/marketing scheme for 

business customers.
I don't know what kind of performance impact there is when you create 

a bunch of APs on one radio.


I had a wierd thought about this, however: If I have 40 clients on an 

AP, and set up 40 "virtual AP's" on the network with each
client on his own SSID, do they count as 40 PTP links, allowing me to 

kick up the antenna gain like with the CPE?


Does the virtual AP really broadcast a secondary SSID, or does it 

switch between the two rapidly, kind of like a poor man's Time

Division Multiplexing.

Pete Davis
NoDial.net
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12/23/2005


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Version: 7.1.371 / Virus Database: 267.14.7/214 - Release Date: 

12/23/2005


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Re: [WISPA] Virtual AP

2005-12-27 Thread Tom DeReggi
I have to agree with John. I can't see the benefit of resorting to those 
type of poor neighbor policies. First off, I'd be embaressed to admit it 
openly on the list. Second you are borderlining on legality. You just 
provided evidence that you purposely attempt to degrade another businesses 
ability to do business, where you'd likely lose now in a suit for tortuous 
interference (or what ever that is called), if ever taken up against you. 
Secondly, anything you do to them, ultimately can be done back to you, if 
they get work of your tactics.


Its been proven many time over, that friendly neighbor policies far better 
mutually benefit WISPs.  I'd advise re-tinking your strategy.


At minimum, if the goal was to get your competitors's clients to associate 
to you, the las tthing you'd want to point out to them is that your network 
would be vulnerable to the same tactics that your neighbor was. You expose 
the flaws in Wifi, and you ALSO provide wifi. If you insisted on tactics to 
steal their association, you'd be much better off, having their clients 
connect to you, and then you pass them to your captive portal signup page, 
with a splash page for better rates and/or performance options, with an 
option to continue at low bandwdith.  The last thing you want to do is play 
Thug tactics, (sorta like mafia protection money), stating we are the ones 
destroying your ability to use the Internet, pay us, or don't communicate at 
all. No one wants to buy service from someone that they've developed 
animosity towards.


Tom DeReggi
RapidDSL & Wireless, Inc
IntAirNet- Fixed Wireless Broadband

- Original Message - 
From: "John Scrivner" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

To: "WISPA General List" 
Sent: Tuesday, December 27, 2005 12:27 PM
Subject: Re: [WISPA] Virtual AP


Short of frustrating potential customers I cannot fathom what positive 
effect this process has. Please enlighten me how this is a good thing to 
do.

Scriv


Kurt Fankhauser wrote:

I do that too, 3 competitors have towers all within ¼ mile of each other, 
I put their ssid in my AP but turn the broadcast off, their clients 
associate to me and I deny all their access so when they try to hook up 
customers it looks like their connected but they cant figure out why it 
doesn’t work, keeps them from signing up clients in my area.


Kurt Fankhauser

WAVELINC

114 S. Walnut St.

Bucyrus, OH 44820

419-562-6405

www.wavelinc.com

-Original Message-
*From:* [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
*On Behalf Of *Rick Smith

*Sent:* Tuesday, December 27, 2005 8:12 AM
*To:* 'WISPA General List'
*Subject:* RE: [WISPA] Virtual AP

actually, I was kidding about the competitor thing, wanted to see if it'd 
start a fire. It's something I'd thought of, but you can't route based on 
Virtual AP SSID


Having an invididual hotspot page per virtual SSID would be cool, on a 
wholesale level...




*From:* [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
*On Behalf Of *Scott Reed

*Sent:* Tuesday, December 27, 2005 10:44 AM
*To:* WISPA General List
*Subject:* RE: [WISPA] Virtual AP

What happens when a potential customer sees the competition's name? They 
call the competitor who says, "We don't do that." Then what, do you get 
called by the competitor?
I guess my question is, how does advertising the competitor's name help 
you?


I like the wholesale idea though. I may have to pursue that in the 
future.


Scott Reed
Owner
NewWays
Wireless Networking
Network Design, Installation and Administration
www.nwwnet.net <http://www.nwwnet.net/>

The season is Christmas, not X-mas, not the holiday, but Christmas, 
because

Christ was born to provide salvation to all who will believe!

*-- Original Message -------*
From: Rick Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "'WISPA General List'" 
Sent: Tue, 27 Dec 2005 10:15:08 -0500
Subject: RE: [WISPA] Virtual AP


Yep, I create virtual SSIDs for all my competitors names (they only

do DSL) :)


I also wholesale service off one of my towers via 2.4 and 900 mhz to

a local computer guy that likes to see his name "in the air" -

the virtual SSID thing was a natural win...

Not sure about the broadcast thing...haven't seen a performance hit

because of the virtual ssid's ...

R

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]

On Behalf Of Pete Davis

Sent: Tuesday, December 27, 2005 9:57 AM
To: WISPA General List
Subject: [WISPA] Virtual AP

Mikrotik APs have the capability to create a "Virtual AP" with a

secondary SSID, but I haven't found much documentation about it.


Has anyone used this feature much? I could see this being useful

during a transitional period, while you are changing the SSID, so

you can access the CPE with 

Re: [WISPA] Virtual AP

2005-12-27 Thread Tom DeReggi

Virtual AP, is a very useful feature, but for other NICE reasons.
You can give your clients multiple ways to connect, to guarantee 
compatibilty.  For example, The higher cost, manually configured service may 
connect through Virtual AP1 that MAC authenticates, to support all VPN 
technologies. Or the Virtual AP2 may allow connectivity via a low cost 
captive portal that doesn't allow VPN through it as a technical limitation. 
Or Virtual AP3 could be used for WEP encryption for guaranteed compatibilty, 
and Virtual AP4 for max protection via WPA-AES encryption, that may not work 
with everyone.


Virtual AP also allows less down time when reconfiguring an AP configuration 
model. For example, if all subscribers are on a NON-encrypted AP, and you 
want to convert to an encrypted AP, add the encrypted Virtual AP, and 
simultaneously leave the NON-encrypted configuration in place. Access 
Subscribers via IP and change one by one, reducing downtime to seconds for 
the conversion of the user, since old and new Virtual APs can co-exist. This 
can be a big deal when there are lots of Subs to convert configurations for. 
It also lets you test configurations, without requiring everyone to convert 
all at once for the testing.


Virtual AP was one of the most engenious features of Mikrotik, which is one 
of the reasons, we have been installing Mikrotik for our Wifi APs, in the 
few areas we deployed WiFi.  Virtual AP has been a life safer to bypass 
technical limitations.


Tom DeReggi
RapidDSL & Wireless, Inc
IntAirNet- Fixed Wireless Broadband


- Original Message - 
From: "John Scrivner" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

To: "WISPA General List" 
Sent: Tuesday, December 27, 2005 12:27 PM
Subject: Re: [WISPA] Virtual AP


Short of frustrating potential customers I cannot fathom what positive 
effect this process has. Please enlighten me how this is a good thing to 
do.

Scriv


Kurt Fankhauser wrote:

I do that too, 3 competitors have towers all within ¼ mile of each other, 
I put their ssid in my AP but turn the broadcast off, their clients 
associate to me and I deny all their access so when they try to hook up 
customers it looks like their connected but they cant figure out why it 
doesn’t work, keeps them from signing up clients in my area.


Kurt Fankhauser

WAVELINC

114 S. Walnut St.

Bucyrus, OH 44820

419-562-6405

www.wavelinc.com

-Original Message-
*From:* [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
*On Behalf Of *Rick Smith

*Sent:* Tuesday, December 27, 2005 8:12 AM
*To:* 'WISPA General List'
*Subject:* RE: [WISPA] Virtual AP

actually, I was kidding about the competitor thing, wanted to see if it'd 
start a fire. It's something I'd thought of, but you can't route based on 
Virtual AP SSID


Having an invididual hotspot page per virtual SSID would be cool, on a 
wholesale level...




*From:* [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
*On Behalf Of *Scott Reed

*Sent:* Tuesday, December 27, 2005 10:44 AM
*To:* WISPA General List
*Subject:* RE: [WISPA] Virtual AP

What happens when a potential customer sees the competition's name? They 
call the competitor who says, "We don't do that." Then what, do you get 
called by the competitor?
I guess my question is, how does advertising the competitor's name help 
you?


I like the wholesale idea though. I may have to pursue that in the 
future.


Scott Reed
Owner
NewWays
Wireless Networking
Network Design, Installation and Administration
www.nwwnet.net <http://www.nwwnet.net/>

The season is Christmas, not X-mas, not the holiday, but Christmas, 
because

Christ was born to provide salvation to all who will believe!

*-- Original Message ---*
From: Rick Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "'WISPA General List'" 
Sent: Tue, 27 Dec 2005 10:15:08 -0500
Subject: RE: [WISPA] Virtual AP


Yep, I create virtual SSIDs for all my competitors names (they only

do DSL) :)


I also wholesale service off one of my towers via 2.4 and 900 mhz to

a local computer guy that likes to see his name "in the air" -

the virtual SSID thing was a natural win...

Not sure about the broadcast thing...haven't seen a performance hit

because of the virtual ssid's ...

R

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]

On Behalf Of Pete Davis

Sent: Tuesday, December 27, 2005 9:57 AM
To: WISPA General List
Subject: [WISPA] Virtual AP

Mikrotik APs have the capability to create a "Virtual AP" with a

secondary SSID, but I haven't found much documentation about it.


Has anyone used this feature much? I could see this being useful

during a transitional period, while you are changing the SSID, so

you can access the CPE with the "old" ssid.
I could also see this being useful for colocating two companies o

Re: [WISPA] Virtual AP

2005-12-27 Thread Bob Moldashel

I don't know...I think its kind of a cute idea!   :-)

OK...But as a board member I cannot condone such business tactics.  Play 
fair now.


As you were..


-B-




Tom DeReggi wrote:

I have to agree with John. I can't see the benefit of resorting to 
those type of poor neighbor policies. First off, I'd be embaressed to 
admit it openly on the list. Second you are borderlining on legality. 
You just provided evidence that you purposely attempt to degrade 
another businesses ability to do business, where you'd likely lose now 
in a suit for tortuous interference (or what ever that is called), if 
ever taken up against you. Secondly, anything you do to them, 
ultimately can be done back to you, if they get work of your tactics.


Its been proven many time over, that friendly neighbor policies far 
better mutually benefit WISPs.  I'd advise re-tinking your strategy.


At minimum, if the goal was to get your competitors's clients to 
associate to you, the las tthing you'd want to point out to them is 
that your network would be vulnerable to the same tactics that your 
neighbor was. You expose the flaws in Wifi, and you ALSO provide wifi. 
If you insisted on tactics to steal their association, you'd be much 
better off, having their clients connect to you, and then you pass 
them to your captive portal signup page, with a splash page for better 
rates and/or performance options, with an option to continue at low 
bandwdith.  The last thing you want to do is play Thug tactics, (sorta 
like mafia protection money), stating we are the ones destroying your 
ability to use the Internet, pay us, or don't communicate at all. No 
one wants to buy service from someone that they've developed animosity 
towards.


Tom DeReggi
RapidDSL & Wireless, Inc
IntAirNet- Fixed Wireless Broadband

- Original Message - From: "John Scrivner" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "WISPA General List" 
Sent: Tuesday, December 27, 2005 12:27 PM
Subject: Re: [WISPA] Virtual AP


Short of frustrating potential customers I cannot fathom what 
positive effect this process has. Please enlighten me how this is a 
good thing to do.

Scriv





--
Bob Moldashel
Lakeland Communications, Inc.
Broadband Deployment Group
1350 Lincoln Avenue
Holbrook, New York 11741 USA
800-479-9195 Toll Free US & Canada
631-585-5558 Fax
516-551-1131 Cell

--
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Re: [WISPA] Virtual AP

2005-12-27 Thread John Thomas

Just because you can do something, doesn't mean you should

John

Kurt Fankhauser wrote:

I do that too, 3 competitors have towers all within ¼ mile of each 
other, I put their ssid in my AP but turn the broadcast off, their 
clients associate to me and I deny all their access so when they try 
to hook up customers it looks like their connected but they cant 
figure out why it doesn’t work, keeps them from signing up clients in 
my area.


Kurt Fankhauser

WAVELINC

114 S. Walnut St.

Bucyrus, OH 44820

419-562-6405

www.wavelinc.com

-Original Message-
*From:* [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
*On Behalf Of *Rick Smith

*Sent:* Tuesday, December 27, 2005 8:12 AM
*To:* 'WISPA General List'
*Subject:* RE: [WISPA] Virtual AP

actually, I was kidding about the competitor thing, wanted to see if 
it'd start a fire. It's something I'd thought of, but you can't route 
based on Virtual AP SSID


Having an invididual hotspot page per virtual SSID would be cool, on a 
wholesale level...




*From:* [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
*On Behalf Of *Scott Reed

*Sent:* Tuesday, December 27, 2005 10:44 AM
*To:* WISPA General List
*Subject:* RE: [WISPA] Virtual AP

What happens when a potential customer sees the competition's name? 
They call the competitor who says, "We don't do that." Then what, do 
you get called by the competitor?
I guess my question is, how does advertising the competitor's name 
help you?


I like the wholesale idea though. I may have to pursue that in the 
future.


Scott Reed
Owner
NewWays
Wireless Networking
Network Design, Installation and Administration
www.nwwnet.net <http://www.nwwnet.net/>

The season is Christmas, not X-mas, not the holiday, but Christmas, 
because

Christ was born to provide salvation to all who will believe!

*-- Original Message ---*
From: Rick Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "'WISPA General List'" 
Sent: Tue, 27 Dec 2005 10:15:08 -0500
Subject: RE: [WISPA] Virtual AP

Yep, I create virtual SSIDs for all my competitors names (they only 

do DSL) :)


I also wholesale service off one of my towers via 2.4 and 900 mhz to 

a local computer guy that likes to see his name "in the air" -

the virtual SSID thing was a natural win...

Not sure about the broadcast thing...haven't seen a performance hit 

because of the virtual ssid's ...

R

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 

On Behalf Of Pete Davis

Sent: Tuesday, December 27, 2005 9:57 AM
To: WISPA General List
Subject: [WISPA] Virtual AP

Mikrotik APs have the capability to create a "Virtual AP" with a 

secondary SSID, but I haven't found much documentation about it.


Has anyone used this feature much? I could see this being useful 

during a transitional period, while you are changing the SSID, so

you can access the CPE with the "old" ssid.
I could also see this being useful for colocating two companies on 

the same tower/AP, like if you have an ISP geared toward
residential service, and another company name/marketing scheme for 

business customers.
I don't know what kind of performance impact there is when you create 

a bunch of APs on one radio.


I had a wierd thought about this, however: If I have 40 clients on an 

AP, and set up 40 "virtual AP's" on the network with each
client on his own SSID, do they count as 40 PTP links, allowing me to 

kick up the antenna gain like with the CPE?


Does the virtual AP really broadcast a secondary SSID, or does it 

switch between the two rapidly, kind of like a poor man's Time

Division Multiplexing.

Pete Davis
NoDial.net
--
WISPA Wireless List: wireless@wispa.org

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http://lists.wispa.org/mailman/listinfo/wireless

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--
No virus found in this incoming message.
Checked by AVG Free Edition.
Version: 7.1.371 / Virus Database: 267.14.7/214 - Release Date: 

12/23/2005


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No virus found in this outgoing message.
Checked by AVG Free Edition.
Version: 7.1.371 / Virus Database: 267.14.7/214 - Release Date: 

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*--- End of Original Message ---*

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RE: [WISPA] Virtual AP

2005-12-27 Thread Kurt Fankhauser
Lol, just seeing what your thoughts were, I only run STAR OS on my AP's
so I couldn't do it if I wanted too. I couldn't help saying it though,
it was such a neat little idea. I'm glad to know the option is there
though if I or you ever need it.

Kurt Fankhauser
WAVELINC
114 S. Walnut St.
Bucyrus, OH 44820
419-562-6405
www.wavelinc.com


-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Bob Moldashel
Sent: Tuesday, December 27, 2005 2:00 PM
To: WISPA General List
Subject: Re: [WISPA] Virtual AP

I don't know...I think its kind of a cute idea!   :-)

OK...But as a board member I cannot condone such business tactics.  Play

fair now.

As you were..


-B-




Tom DeReggi wrote:

> I have to agree with John. I can't see the benefit of resorting to 
> those type of poor neighbor policies. First off, I'd be embaressed to 
> admit it openly on the list. Second you are borderlining on legality. 
> You just provided evidence that you purposely attempt to degrade 
> another businesses ability to do business, where you'd likely lose now

> in a suit for tortuous interference (or what ever that is called), if 
> ever taken up against you. Secondly, anything you do to them, 
> ultimately can be done back to you, if they get work of your tactics.
>
> Its been proven many time over, that friendly neighbor policies far 
> better mutually benefit WISPs.  I'd advise re-tinking your strategy.
>
> At minimum, if the goal was to get your competitors's clients to 
> associate to you, the las tthing you'd want to point out to them is 
> that your network would be vulnerable to the same tactics that your 
> neighbor was. You expose the flaws in Wifi, and you ALSO provide wifi.

> If you insisted on tactics to steal their association, you'd be much 
> better off, having their clients connect to you, and then you pass 
> them to your captive portal signup page, with a splash page for better

> rates and/or performance options, with an option to continue at low 
> bandwdith.  The last thing you want to do is play Thug tactics, (sorta

> like mafia protection money), stating we are the ones destroying your 
> ability to use the Internet, pay us, or don't communicate at all. No 
> one wants to buy service from someone that they've developed animosity

> towards.
>
> Tom DeReggi
> RapidDSL & Wireless, Inc
> IntAirNet- Fixed Wireless Broadband
>
> - Original Message - From: "John Scrivner" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: "WISPA General List" 
> Sent: Tuesday, December 27, 2005 12:27 PM
> Subject: Re: [WISPA] Virtual AP
>
>
>> Short of frustrating potential customers I cannot fathom what 
>> positive effect this process has. Please enlighten me how this is a 
>> good thing to do.
>> Scriv
>


-- 
Bob Moldashel
Lakeland Communications, Inc.
Broadband Deployment Group
1350 Lincoln Avenue
Holbrook, New York 11741 USA
800-479-9195 Toll Free US & Canada
631-585-5558 Fax
516-551-1131 Cell

-- 
WISPA Wireless List: wireless@wispa.org

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http://lists.wispa.org/mailman/listinfo/wireless

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-- 
No virus found in this incoming message.
Checked by AVG Free Edition.
Version: 7.1.371 / Virus Database: 267.14.5/212 - Release Date:
12/23/2005


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Re: [WISPA] Virtual AP

2005-12-27 Thread Pete Davis - NoDial.net
If you have a competitor on a nearby tower who is uncooperative with you 
on channel coordination or whatever, I could see this as a way to "goof 
with" your competitor, by having his clients associate with you instead, 
and flood their technical support lines with calls. Having the virtual 
AP only run from 3:30pm to 4:30pm every other Monday could really make 
things fun for them to figure out.


Thats a mean thing to do, and I would never recommend that anyone do 
unto others as they wouldn't have done to them.


If a competitor goes broke and pulls the plug on his AP, this could 
REALLY be benificial, as you could advertise on the hotspot signin 
screen that there will be no setup fee for former brandX clients.


If you turn on universal client, you might pick up a customer who sees 
your tower better than your competitor. About as underhanded and 
unethical as callforwarding his sales line to yours, but 


Pete Davis
NoDial.net



John Scrivner wrote:

Short of frustrating potential customers I cannot fathom what positive 
effect this process has. Please enlighten me how this is a good thing 
to do.

Scriv


Kurt Fankhauser wrote:

I do that too, 3 competitors have towers all within ¼ mile of each 
other, I put their ssid in my AP but turn the broadcast off, their 
clients associate to me and I deny all their access so when they try 
to hook up customers it looks like their connected but they cant 
figure out why it doesn’t work, keeps them from signing up clients in 
my area.


Kurt Fankhauser

WAVELINC

114 S. Walnut St.

Bucyrus, OH 44820

419-562-6405

www.wavelinc.com

-Original Message-
*From:* [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] *On Behalf Of *Rick Smith

*Sent:* Tuesday, December 27, 2005 8:12 AM
*To:* 'WISPA General List'
*Subject:* RE: [WISPA] Virtual AP

actually, I was kidding about the competitor thing, wanted to see if 
it'd start a fire. It's something I'd thought of, but you can't route 
based on Virtual AP SSID


Having an invididual hotspot page per virtual SSID would be cool, on 
a wholesale level...




*From:* [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] *On Behalf Of *Scott Reed

*Sent:* Tuesday, December 27, 2005 10:44 AM
*To:* WISPA General List
*Subject:* RE: [WISPA] Virtual AP

What happens when a potential customer sees the competition's name? 
They call the competitor who says, "We don't do that." Then what, do 
you get called by the competitor?
I guess my question is, how does advertising the competitor's name 
help you?


I like the wholesale idea though. I may have to pursue that in the 
future.


Scott Reed
Owner
NewWays
Wireless Networking
Network Design, Installation and Administration
www.nwwnet.net <http://www.nwwnet.net/>

The season is Christmas, not X-mas, not the holiday, but Christmas, 
because

Christ was born to provide salvation to all who will believe!

*-- Original Message ---*
From: Rick Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "'WISPA General List'" 
Sent: Tue, 27 Dec 2005 10:15:08 -0500
Subject: RE: [WISPA] Virtual AP

Yep, I create virtual SSIDs for all my competitors names (they only 


do DSL) :)



I also wholesale service off one of my towers via 2.4 and 900 mhz to 


a local computer guy that likes to see his name "in the air" -


the virtual SSID thing was a natural win...

Not sure about the broadcast thing...haven't seen a performance hit 


because of the virtual ssid's ...


R

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 


On Behalf Of Pete Davis


Sent: Tuesday, December 27, 2005 9:57 AM
To: WISPA General List
Subject: [WISPA] Virtual AP

Mikrotik APs have the capability to create a "Virtual AP" with a 


secondary SSID, but I haven't found much documentation about it.



Has anyone used this feature much? I could see this being useful 


during a transitional period, while you are changing the SSID, so


you can access the CPE with the "old" ssid.
I could also see this being useful for colocating two companies on 


the same tower/AP, like if you have an ISP geared toward

residential service, and another company name/marketing scheme for 


business customers.

I don't know what kind of performance impact there is when you create 


a bunch of APs on one radio.



I had a wierd thought about this, however: If I have 40 clients on an 


AP, and set up 40 "virtual AP's" on the network with each

client on his own SSID, do they count as 40 PTP links, allowing me to 


kick up the antenna gain like with the CPE?



Does the virtual AP really broadcast a secondary SSID, or does it 


switch between the two rapidly, kind of like a poor man's Time


Division Multiplexing.

Pete Davis
NoDial.net
--
WISPA Wireless List: wireless@wispa.org

Subscribe

Re: [WISPA] Virtual AP

2005-12-27 Thread Brian Rohrbacher
How can I avoid my competition doing this to me?  Hide SSID and change 
it every so often?


Tom DeReggi wrote:

I have to agree with John. I can't see the benefit of resorting to 
those type of poor neighbor policies. First off, I'd be embaressed to 
admit it openly on the list. Second you are borderlining on legality. 
You just provided evidence that you purposely attempt to degrade 
another businesses ability to do business, where you'd likely lose now 
in a suit for tortuous interference (or what ever that is called), if 
ever taken up against you. Secondly, anything you do to them, 
ultimately can be done back to you, if they get work of your tactics.


Its been proven many time over, that friendly neighbor policies far 
better mutually benefit WISPs.  I'd advise re-tinking your strategy.


At minimum, if the goal was to get your competitors's clients to 
associate to you, the las tthing you'd want to point out to them is 
that your network would be vulnerable to the same tactics that your 
neighbor was. You expose the flaws in Wifi, and you ALSO provide wifi. 
If you insisted on tactics to steal their association, you'd be much 
better off, having their clients connect to you, and then you pass 
them to your captive portal signup page, with a splash page for better 
rates and/or performance options, with an option to continue at low 
bandwdith.  The last thing you want to do is play Thug tactics, (sorta 
like mafia protection money), stating we are the ones destroying your 
ability to use the Internet, pay us, or don't communicate at all. No 
one wants to buy service from someone that they've developed animosity 
towards.


Tom DeReggi
RapidDSL & Wireless, Inc
IntAirNet- Fixed Wireless Broadband

- Original Message - From: "John Scrivner" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "WISPA General List" 
Sent: Tuesday, December 27, 2005 12:27 PM
Subject: Re: [WISPA] Virtual AP


Short of frustrating potential customers I cannot fathom what 
positive effect this process has. Please enlighten me how this is a 
good thing to do.

Scriv


Kurt Fankhauser wrote:

I do that too, 3 competitors have towers all within ¼ mile of each 
other, I put their ssid in my AP but turn the broadcast off, their 
clients associate to me and I deny all their access so when they try 
to hook up customers it looks like their connected but they cant 
figure out why it doesn’t work, keeps them from signing up clients 
in my area.


Kurt Fankhauser

WAVELINC

114 S. Walnut St.

Bucyrus, OH 44820

419-562-6405

www.wavelinc.com

-Original Message-
*From:* [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] *On Behalf Of *Rick Smith

*Sent:* Tuesday, December 27, 2005 8:12 AM
*To:* 'WISPA General List'
*Subject:* RE: [WISPA] Virtual AP

actually, I was kidding about the competitor thing, wanted to see if 
it'd start a fire. It's something I'd thought of, but you can't 
route based on Virtual AP SSID


Having an invididual hotspot page per virtual SSID would be cool, on 
a wholesale level...


 



*From:* [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] *On Behalf Of *Scott Reed

*Sent:* Tuesday, December 27, 2005 10:44 AM
*To:* WISPA General List
*Subject:* RE: [WISPA] Virtual AP

What happens when a potential customer sees the competition's name? 
They call the competitor who says, "We don't do that." Then what, do 
you get called by the competitor?
I guess my question is, how does advertising the competitor's name 
help you?


I like the wholesale idea though. I may have to pursue that in the 
future.


Scott Reed
Owner
NewWays
Wireless Networking
Network Design, Installation and Administration
www.nwwnet.net <http://www.nwwnet.net/>

The season is Christmas, not X-mas, not the holiday, but Christmas, 
because

Christ was born to provide salvation to all who will believe!

*-- Original Message -------*
From: Rick Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "'WISPA General List'" 
Sent: Tue, 27 Dec 2005 10:15:08 -0500
Subject: RE: [WISPA] Virtual AP


Yep, I create virtual SSIDs for all my competitors names (they only


do DSL) :)



I also wholesale service off one of my towers via 2.4 and 900 mhz to


a local computer guy that likes to see his name "in the air" -


the virtual SSID thing was a natural win...

Not sure about the broadcast thing...haven't seen a performance hit


because of the virtual ssid's ...


R

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]


On Behalf Of Pete Davis


Sent: Tuesday, December 27, 2005 9:57 AM
To: WISPA General List
Subject: [WISPA] Virtual AP

Mikrotik APs have the capability to create a "Virtual AP" with a


secondary SSID, but I haven't found much documentation about it.



Has anyone used this feature much? 

RE: [WISPA] Virtual AP

2005-12-27 Thread Kurt Fankhauser
Good quesion

Kurt Fankhauser
WAVELINC
114 S. Walnut St.
Bucyrus, OH 44820
419-562-6405
www.wavelinc.com


-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Brian Rohrbacher
Sent: Tuesday, December 27, 2005 8:18 PM
To: WISPA General List
Subject: Re: [WISPA] Virtual AP

How can I avoid my competition doing this to me?  Hide SSID and change 
it every so often?

Tom DeReggi wrote:

> I have to agree with John. I can't see the benefit of resorting to 
> those type of poor neighbor policies. First off, I'd be embaressed to 
> admit it openly on the list. Second you are borderlining on legality. 
> You just provided evidence that you purposely attempt to degrade 
> another businesses ability to do business, where you'd likely lose now

> in a suit for tortuous interference (or what ever that is called), if 
> ever taken up against you. Secondly, anything you do to them, 
> ultimately can be done back to you, if they get work of your tactics.
>
> Its been proven many time over, that friendly neighbor policies far 
> better mutually benefit WISPs.  I'd advise re-tinking your strategy.
>
> At minimum, if the goal was to get your competitors's clients to 
> associate to you, the las tthing you'd want to point out to them is 
> that your network would be vulnerable to the same tactics that your 
> neighbor was. You expose the flaws in Wifi, and you ALSO provide wifi.

> If you insisted on tactics to steal their association, you'd be much 
> better off, having their clients connect to you, and then you pass 
> them to your captive portal signup page, with a splash page for better

> rates and/or performance options, with an option to continue at low 
> bandwdith.  The last thing you want to do is play Thug tactics, (sorta

> like mafia protection money), stating we are the ones destroying your 
> ability to use the Internet, pay us, or don't communicate at all. No 
> one wants to buy service from someone that they've developed animosity

> towards.
>
> Tom DeReggi
> RapidDSL & Wireless, Inc
> IntAirNet- Fixed Wireless Broadband
>
> - Original Message - From: "John Scrivner" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: "WISPA General List" 
> Sent: Tuesday, December 27, 2005 12:27 PM
> Subject: Re: [WISPA] Virtual AP
>
>
>> Short of frustrating potential customers I cannot fathom what 
>> positive effect this process has. Please enlighten me how this is a 
>> good thing to do.
>> Scriv
>>
>>
>> Kurt Fankhauser wrote:
>>
>>> I do that too, 3 competitors have towers all within ¼ mile of each 
>>> other, I put their ssid in my AP but turn the broadcast off, their 
>>> clients associate to me and I deny all their access so when they try

>>> to hook up customers it looks like their connected but they cant 
>>> figure out why it doesn’t work, keeps them from signing up clients 
>>> in my area.
>>>
>>> Kurt Fankhauser
>>>
>>> WAVELINC
>>>
>>> 114 S. Walnut St.
>>>
>>> Bucyrus, OH 44820
>>>
>>> 419-562-6405
>>>
>>> www.wavelinc.com
>>>
>>> -Original Message-
>>> *From:* [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
>>> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] *On Behalf Of *Rick Smith
>>> *Sent:* Tuesday, December 27, 2005 8:12 AM
>>> *To:* 'WISPA General List'
>>> *Subject:* RE: [WISPA] Virtual AP
>>>
>>> actually, I was kidding about the competitor thing, wanted to see if

>>> it'd start a fire. It's something I'd thought of, but you can't 
>>> route based on Virtual AP SSID
>>>
>>> Having an invididual hotspot page per virtual SSID would be cool, on

>>> a wholesale level...
>>>
>>>


>>>
>>>
>>> *From:* [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
>>> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] *On Behalf Of *Scott Reed
>>> *Sent:* Tuesday, December 27, 2005 10:44 AM
>>> *To:* WISPA General List
>>> *Subject:* RE: [WISPA] Virtual AP
>>>
>>> What happens when a potential customer sees the competition's name? 
>>> They call the competitor who says, "We don't do that." Then what, do

>>> you get called by the competitor?
>>> I guess my question is, how does advertising the competitor's name 
>>> help you?
>>>
>>> I like the wholesale idea though. I may have to pursue that in the 
>>> future.
>>>
>>> Scott Reed
>>> Owner
>>> NewWays
>

RE: [WISPA] Virtual AP

2005-12-28 Thread Paul Hendry
What other things can be assigned per virtual SSID? It would be nice if you
could set separate frequencies (or channel bandwidths) but I doubt this is
technically possible.

Cheers,

P.

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Butch Evans
Sent: 27 December 2005 15:49
To: WISPA General List
Subject: Re: [WISPA] Virtual AP

On Tue, 27 Dec 2005, John Scrivner wrote:

>associate and use the AP. One nice feature is the ability to set 
>different AP features for each SSID. For instance you can have 
>different WEP or other security settings for each virtual AP. Nice 
>feature.

Yes, this is a nice feature.  MT also allows you to have unique WEP 
keys per sub, whether you use virtual APs or not.

-- 
Butch Evans
BPS Networks  http://www.bpsnetworks.com/
Bernie, MO
Mikrotik Certified Consultant
(http://www.mikrotik.com/consultants.html)
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RE: [WISPA] Virtual AP

2005-12-28 Thread Butch Evans

On Wed, 28 Dec 2005, Paul Hendry wrote:

What other things can be assigned per virtual SSID? It would be 
nice if you could set separate frequencies (or channel bandwidths) 
but I doubt this is technically possible.


Pretty much everything can be handled differently on virtual APs, 
except the obvious things, which you mentioned above.  Your "normal" 
and "virtual" AP will run on the same frequency, but many other 
settings are available.  It is just another interface to the MT. 
You can have different firewall rules, different QOS settings, 
different Hotspot.  Pretty much anything that you can do on an 
interface, you can do on a virtual AP.


--
Butch Evans
BPS Networks  http://www.bpsnetworks.com/
Bernie, MO
Mikrotik Certified Consultant
(http://www.mikrotik.com/consultants.html)
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Re: [WISPA] Virtual AP

2005-12-28 Thread Tom DeReggi

How can I avoid my competition doing this to me?


Yes, Hide SSID.  However, that does not help, if you are offering a self 
signup service where seeing the SSID is what brings in the subscriber in the 
first place.  I suggest Virtual APs, so monthly subscribers can be 
transitioned to a different SSID. In other words advertise one, and then 
after you qualify them and have their contact info, mail them a new 
preferred SSID to use, that is not broadcasted.


But the only real thing you can do about it is to deploy gear that does not 
have that limitation. One of the reasons, we deploy Trango, that has 
connection security built in.


Tom DeReggi
RapidDSL & Wireless, Inc
IntAirNet- Fixed Wireless Broadband


- Original Message - 
From: "Brian Rohrbacher" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

To: "WISPA General List" 
Sent: Tuesday, December 27, 2005 11:17 PM
Subject: Re: [WISPA] Virtual AP


How can I avoid my competition doing this to me?  Hide SSID and change it 
every so often?


Tom DeReggi wrote:

I have to agree with John. I can't see the benefit of resorting to those 
type of poor neighbor policies. First off, I'd be embaressed to admit it 
openly on the list. Second you are borderlining on legality. You just 
provided evidence that you purposely attempt to degrade another 
businesses ability to do business, where you'd likely lose now in a suit 
for tortuous interference (or what ever that is called), if ever taken up 
against you. Secondly, anything you do to them, ultimately can be done 
back to you, if they get work of your tactics.


Its been proven many time over, that friendly neighbor policies far 
better mutually benefit WISPs.  I'd advise re-tinking your strategy.


At minimum, if the goal was to get your competitors's clients to 
associate to you, the las tthing you'd want to point out to them is that 
your network would be vulnerable to the same tactics that your neighbor 
was. You expose the flaws in Wifi, and you ALSO provide wifi. If you 
insisted on tactics to steal their association, you'd be much better off, 
having their clients connect to you, and then you pass them to your 
captive portal signup page, with a splash page for better rates and/or 
performance options, with an option to continue at low bandwdith.  The 
last thing you want to do is play Thug tactics, (sorta like mafia 
protection money), stating we are the ones destroying your ability to use 
the Internet, pay us, or don't communicate at all. No one wants to buy 
service from someone that they've developed animosity towards.


Tom DeReggi
RapidDSL & Wireless, Inc
IntAirNet- Fixed Wireless Broadband

- Original Message - From: "John Scrivner" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "WISPA General List" 
Sent: Tuesday, December 27, 2005 12:27 PM
Subject: Re: [WISPA] Virtual AP


Short of frustrating potential customers I cannot fathom what positive 
effect this process has. Please enlighten me how this is a good thing to 
do.

Scriv


Kurt Fankhauser wrote:

I do that too, 3 competitors have towers all within ¼ mile of each 
other, I put their ssid in my AP but turn the broadcast off, their 
clients associate to me and I deny all their access so when they try to 
hook up customers it looks like their connected but they cant figure 
out why it doesn’t work, keeps them from signing up clients in my area.


Kurt Fankhauser

WAVELINC

114 S. Walnut St.

Bucyrus, OH 44820

419-562-6405

www.wavelinc.com

-Original Message-
*From:* [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
*On Behalf Of *Rick Smith

*Sent:* Tuesday, December 27, 2005 8:12 AM
*To:* 'WISPA General List'
*Subject:* RE: [WISPA] Virtual AP

actually, I was kidding about the competitor thing, wanted to see if 
it'd start a fire. It's something I'd thought of, but you can't route 
based on Virtual AP SSID


Having an invididual hotspot page per virtual SSID would be cool, on a 
wholesale level...





*From:* [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
*On Behalf Of *Scott Reed

*Sent:* Tuesday, December 27, 2005 10:44 AM
*To:* WISPA General List
*Subject:* RE: [WISPA] Virtual AP

What happens when a potential customer sees the competition's name? 
They call the competitor who says, "We don't do that." Then what, do 
you get called by the competitor?
I guess my question is, how does advertising the competitor's name help 
you?


I like the wholesale idea though. I may have to pursue that in the 
future.


Scott Reed
Owner
NewWays
Wireless Networking
Network Design, Installation and Administration
www.nwwnet.net <http://www.nwwnet.net/>

The season is Christmas, not X-mas, not the holiday, but Christmas, 
because

Christ was born to provide salvation to all who will believe!

*------ Original Message ---*
From: Ric

Re: [WISPA] Virtual AP

2005-12-28 Thread Tom DeReggi
Self defense is another matter all togeather. If someone starts playing hard 
ball, so be it if you play hardball back. My point was that good ethics 
often prevents the need to ever play hard ball, and everyone wins.
The concept of thinking that another player will never play on your field 
just isn't realistic. Competition is going to come, and WISPs need to find a 
way to deal with it amicably, or the industry loses.  With that said, if the 
other party won't play ball nice, well then, you do what you have to do. 
But the battling WISPs can only handle so much pain before they both self 
destruct themselves.




Tom DeReggi
RapidDSL & Wireless, Inc
IntAirNet- Fixed Wireless Broadband


- Original Message - 
From: "Pete Davis - NoDial.net" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

To: "WISPA General List" 
Sent: Tuesday, December 27, 2005 11:07 PM
Subject: Re: [WISPA] Virtual AP


If you have a competitor on a nearby tower who is uncooperative with you 
on channel coordination or whatever, I could see this as a way to "goof 
with" your competitor, by having his clients associate with you instead, 
and flood their technical support lines with calls. Having the virtual AP 
only run from 3:30pm to 4:30pm every other Monday could really make things 
fun for them to figure out.


Thats a mean thing to do, and I would never recommend that anyone do unto 
others as they wouldn't have done to them.


If a competitor goes broke and pulls the plug on his AP, this could REALLY 
be benificial, as you could advertise on the hotspot signin screen that 
there will be no setup fee for former brandX clients.


If you turn on universal client, you might pick up a customer who sees 
your tower better than your competitor. About as underhanded and unethical 
as callforwarding his sales line to yours, but 


Pete Davis
NoDial.net



John Scrivner wrote:

Short of frustrating potential customers I cannot fathom what positive 
effect this process has. Please enlighten me how this is a good thing to 
do.

Scriv


Kurt Fankhauser wrote:

I do that too, 3 competitors have towers all within ¼ mile of each 
other, I put their ssid in my AP but turn the broadcast off, their 
clients associate to me and I deny all their access so when they try to 
hook up customers it looks like their connected but they cant figure out 
why it doesn’t work, keeps them from signing up clients in my area.


Kurt Fankhauser

WAVELINC

114 S. Walnut St.

Bucyrus, OH 44820

419-562-6405

www.wavelinc.com

-Original Message-
*From:* [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
*On Behalf Of *Rick Smith

*Sent:* Tuesday, December 27, 2005 8:12 AM
*To:* 'WISPA General List'
*Subject:* RE: [WISPA] Virtual AP

actually, I was kidding about the competitor thing, wanted to see if 
it'd start a fire. It's something I'd thought of, but you can't route 
based on Virtual AP SSID


Having an invididual hotspot page per virtual SSID would be cool, on a 
wholesale level...




*From:* [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
*On Behalf Of *Scott Reed

*Sent:* Tuesday, December 27, 2005 10:44 AM
*To:* WISPA General List
*Subject:* RE: [WISPA] Virtual AP

What happens when a potential customer sees the competition's name? They 
call the competitor who says, "We don't do that." Then what, do you get 
called by the competitor?
I guess my question is, how does advertising the competitor's name help 
you?


I like the wholesale idea though. I may have to pursue that in the 
future.


Scott Reed
Owner
NewWays
Wireless Networking
Network Design, Installation and Administration
www.nwwnet.net <http://www.nwwnet.net/>

The season is Christmas, not X-mas, not the holiday, but Christmas, 
because

Christ was born to provide salvation to all who will believe!

*-- Original Message ---*
From: Rick Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "'WISPA General List'" 
Sent: Tue, 27 Dec 2005 10:15:08 -0500
Subject: RE: [WISPA] Virtual AP


Yep, I create virtual SSIDs for all my competitors names (they only


do DSL) :)



I also wholesale service off one of my towers via 2.4 and 900 mhz to


a local computer guy that likes to see his name "in the air" -


the virtual SSID thing was a natural win...

Not sure about the broadcast thing...haven't seen a performance hit


because of the virtual ssid's ...


R

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]


On Behalf Of Pete Davis


Sent: Tuesday, December 27, 2005 9:57 AM
To: WISPA General List
Subject: [WISPA] Virtual AP

Mikrotik APs have the capability to create a "Virtual AP" with a


secondary SSID, but I haven't found much documentation about it.



Has anyone used this feature much? I could see this being useful


during a transitional period, while you

Re: [WISPA] Virtual AP

2005-12-28 Thread Ron Wallace
OK guys, what is a virtual AP, if they are more reliable than my existing APs, I take a truck load.>-Original Message->From: Butch Evans [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>Sent: Wednesday, December 28, 2005 10:51 AM>To: 'WISPA General List'>Subject: RE: [WISPA] Virtual AP>>On Wed, 28 Dec 2005, Paul Hendry wrote:>>>What other things can be assigned per virtual SSID? It would be >>nice if you could set separate frequencies (or channel bandwidths) >>but I doubt this is technically possible.>>Pretty much everything can be handled differently on virtual APs, >except the obvious things, which you mentioned above. Your "normal" >and "virtual" AP will run on the same frequency, but many other >settings are available. It is just another interface to the MT. >You can have different firewall rules, different QOS settings, >different Hotspot. Pretty much anything that you can do on an >interface, you can do on a virtual AP.>>-- >Butch Evans>BPS Networks http://www.bpsnetworks.com/>Bernie, MO>Mikrotik Certified Consultant>(http://www.mikrotik.com/consultants.html)>-- >WISPA Wireless List: wireless@wispa.org>>Subscribe/Unsubscribe:>http://lists.wispa.org/mailman/listinfo/wireless>>Archives: http://lists.wispa.org/pipermail/wireless/>
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Re: [WISPA] Virtual AP

2005-12-28 Thread Butch Evans

On Wed, 28 Dec 2005, Ron Wallace wrote:

OK guys, what is a virtual AP, if they are more reliable than my 
existing APs, I take a truck load.


Virtual AP functionality is documented here:
http://www.mikrotik.com/docs/ros/2.9/interface/wireless

--
Butch Evans
BPS Networks  http://www.bpsnetworks.com/
Bernie, MO
Mikrotik Certified Consultant
(http://www.mikrotik.com/consultants.html)
--
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Re: [WISPA] Virtual AP

2005-12-28 Thread Mac Dearman
It is as simple as knowing the MAC addy of your Access Point. You would 
have to be either pretty stupid or a complete Newbie to the wireless 
world to let a fake SSID trip you up.  

  Kurt - - if you think for one minute you are slowing them down or 
keeping them out of a specific territory  by  doing this - - you are the 
Newbie :-)


Mac Dearman
Maximum Access, LLC.
www.inetsouth.com
www.radioresponse.org (Katrina relief efforts)
318-728-8600 - Rayville
318-728-9600





Tom DeReggi wrote:


How can I avoid my competition doing this to me?



Yes, Hide SSID.  However, that does not help, if you are offering a 
self signup service where seeing the SSID is what brings in the 
subscriber in the first place.  I suggest Virtual APs, so monthly 
subscribers can be transitioned to a different SSID. In other words 
advertise one, and then after you qualify them and have their contact 
info, mail them a new preferred SSID to use, that is not broadcasted.


But the only real thing you can do about it is to deploy gear that 
does not have that limitation. One of the reasons, we deploy Trango, 
that has connection security built in.


Tom DeReggi
RapidDSL & Wireless, Inc
IntAirNet- Fixed Wireless Broadband


- Original Message - From: "Brian Rohrbacher" 
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

To: "WISPA General List" 
Sent: Tuesday, December 27, 2005 11:17 PM
Subject: Re: [WISPA] Virtual AP


How can I avoid my competition doing this to me?  Hide SSID and 
change it every so often?


Tom DeReggi wrote:

I have to agree with John. I can't see the benefit of resorting to 
those type of poor neighbor policies. First off, I'd be embaressed 
to admit it openly on the list. Second you are borderlining on 
legality. You just provided evidence that you purposely attempt to 
degrade another businesses ability to do business, where you'd 
likely lose now in a suit for tortuous interference (or what ever 
that is called), if ever taken up against you. Secondly, anything 
you do to them, ultimately can be done back to you, if they get work 
of your tactics.


Its been proven many time over, that friendly neighbor policies far 
better mutually benefit WISPs.  I'd advise re-tinking your strategy.


At minimum, if the goal was to get your competitors's clients to 
associate to you, the las tthing you'd want to point out to them is 
that your network would be vulnerable to the same tactics that your 
neighbor was. You expose the flaws in Wifi, and you ALSO provide 
wifi. If you insisted on tactics to steal their association, you'd 
be much better off, having their clients connect to you, and then 
you pass them to your captive portal signup page, with a splash page 
for better rates and/or performance options, with an option to 
continue at low bandwdith.  The last thing you want to do is play 
Thug tactics, (sorta like mafia protection money), stating we are 
the ones destroying your ability to use the Internet, pay us, or 
don't communicate at all. No one wants to buy service from someone 
that they've developed animosity towards.


Tom DeReggi
RapidDSL & Wireless, Inc
IntAirNet- Fixed Wireless Broadband

- Original Message - From: "John Scrivner" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "WISPA General List" 
Sent: Tuesday, December 27, 2005 12:27 PM
Subject: Re: [WISPA] Virtual AP


Short of frustrating potential customers I cannot fathom what 
positive effect this process has. Please enlighten me how this is a 
good thing to do.

Scriv


Kurt Fankhauser wrote:

I do that too, 3 competitors have towers all within ¼ mile of each 
other, I put their ssid in my AP but turn the broadcast off, their 
clients associate to me and I deny all their access so when they 
try to hook up customers it looks like their connected but they 
cant figure out why it doesn’t work, keeps them from signing up 
clients in my area.


Kurt Fankhauser

WAVELINC

114 S. Walnut St.

Bucyrus, OH 44820

419-562-6405

www.wavelinc.com

-Original Message-
*From:* [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] *On Behalf Of *Rick Smith

*Sent:* Tuesday, December 27, 2005 8:12 AM
*To:* 'WISPA General List'
*Subject:* RE: [WISPA] Virtual AP

actually, I was kidding about the competitor thing, wanted to see 
if it'd start a fire. It's something I'd thought of, but you can't 
route based on Virtual AP SSID


Having an invididual hotspot page per virtual SSID would be cool, 
on a wholesale level...


 




*From:* [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] *On Behalf Of *Scott Reed

*Sent:* Tuesday, December 27, 2005 10:44 AM
*To:* WISPA General List
*Subject:* RE: [WISPA] Virtual AP

What happens when a potential customer sees the competition's 
name? They call the competitor who says, "We don't do that." Then 
what, do you get called by the com

Re: [WISPA] Virtual AP

2005-12-28 Thread Ron Wallace
Thanks Butch>-Original Message->From: Butch Evans [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>Sent: Wednesday, December 28, 2005 06:38 PM>To: 'WISPA General List'>Subject: Re: [WISPA] Virtual AP>>On Wed, 28 Dec 2005, Ron Wallace wrote:>>>OK guys, what is a virtual AP, if they are more reliable than my >>existing APs, I take a truck load.>>Virtual AP functionality is documented here:>http://www.mikrotik.com/docs/ros/2.9/interface/wireless>>-- >Butch Evans>BPS Networks http://www.bpsnetworks.com/>Bernie, MO>Mikrotik Certified Consultant>(http://www.mikrotik.com/consultants.html)>-- >WISPA Wireless List: wireless@wispa.org>>Subscribe/Unsubscribe:>http://lists.wispa.org/mailman/listinfo/wireless>>Archives: http://lists.wispa.org/pipermail/wireless/>
-- 
WISPA Wireless List: wireless@wispa.org

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Re: [WISPA] Virtual AP

2005-12-28 Thread Ron Wallace
Well, I certainly am a newbie in many ways.>-Original Message->From: Mac Dearman [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>Sent: Wednesday, December 28, 2005 07:52 PM>To: 'WISPA General List'>Subject: Re: [WISPA] Virtual AP>>It is as simple as knowing the MAC addy of your Access Point. You would >have to be either pretty stupid or a complete Newbie to the wireless >world to let a fake SSID trip you up. >> Kurt - - if you think for one minute you are slowing them down or >keeping them out of a specific territory by doing this - - you are the >Newbie :-)>>Mac Dearman>Maximum Access, LLC.>www.inetsouth.com>www.radioresponse.org (Katrina relief efforts)>318-728-8600 - Rayville>318-728-9600>>>>>>Tom DeReggi wrote:>>>> How can I avoid my competition doing this to me?>>>>>> Yes, Hide SSID. However, that does not help, if you are offering a >> self signup service where seeing the SSID is what brings in the >> subscriber in the first place. I suggest Virtual APs, so monthly >> subscribers can be transitioned to a different SSID. In other words >> advertise one, and then after you qualify them and have their contact >> info, mail them a new preferred SSID to use, that is not broadcasted.>>>> But the only real thing you can do about it is to deploy gear that >> does not have that limitation. One of the reasons, we deploy Trango, >> that has connection security built in.>>>> Tom DeReggi>> RapidDSL & Wireless, Inc>> IntAirNet- Fixed Wireless Broadband>>>>>> - Original Message - From: "Brian Rohrbacher" >> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>>> To: "WISPA General List" >> Sent: Tuesday, December 27, 2005 11:17 PM>> Subject: Re: [WISPA] Virtual AP>>>>>>> How can I avoid my competition doing this to me? Hide SSID and >>> change it every so often?>>>>>> Tom DeReggi wrote:>>>>>>> I have to agree with John. I can't see the benefit of resorting to >>>> those type of poor neighbor policies. First off, I'd be embaressed >>>> to admit it openly on the list. Second you are borderlining on >>>> legality. You just provided evidence that you purposely attempt to >>>> degrade another businesses ability to do business, where you'd >>>> likely lose now in a suit for tortuous interference (or what ever >>>> that is called), if ever taken up against you. Secondly, anything >>>> you do to them, ultimately can be done back to you, if they get work >>>> of your tactics.>>>>>>>> Its been proven many time over, that friendly neighbor policies far >>>> better mutually benefit WISPs. I'd advise re-tinking your strategy.>>>>>>>> At minimum, if the goal was to get your competitors's clients to >>>> associate to you, the las tthing you'd want to point out to them is >>>> that your network would be vulnerable to the same tactics that your >>>> neighbor was. You expose the flaws in Wifi, and you ALSO provide >>>> wifi. If you insisted on tactics to steal their association, you'd >>>> be much better off, having their clients connect to you, and then >>>> you pass them to your captive portal signup page, with a splash page >>>> for better rates and/or performance options, with an option to >>>> continue at low bandwdith. The last thing you want to do is play >>>> Thug tactics, (sorta like mafia protection money), stating we are >>>> the ones destroying your ability to use the Internet, pay us, or >>>> don't communicate at all. No one wants to buy service from someone >>>> that they've developed animosity towards.>>>>>>>> Tom DeReggi>>>> RapidDSL & Wireless, Inc>>>> IntAirNet- Fixed Wireless Broadband>>>>>>>> - Original Message - From: "John Scrivner" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>>>>> To: "WISPA General List" >>>> Sent: Tuesday, December 27, 2005 12:27 PM>>>> Subject: Re: [WISPA] Virtual AP>>>>>>>>>>>>> Short of frustrating potential customers I cannot fathom what >>>>> positive effect this process has. Please enlighten me how this is a >>>>> good thing to do.>>>>> Scriv>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> Kurt Fankhauser wrote:>>>>>>>>>>> I do that too, 3 competitors have towers all within ¼ mile of each >>>&g

RE: [WISPA] Virtual AP

2005-12-28 Thread Kurt Fankhauser
 "...if you think for one minute you are slowing them down or 
 keeping them out of a specific territory  by  doing this.."


That’s why god invented the canopy cluster...



Kurt Fankhauser
WAVELINC
114 S. Walnut St.
Bucyrus, OH 44820
419-562-6405
www.wavelinc.com


-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Mac Dearman
Sent: Wednesday, December 28, 2005 4:53 PM
To: WISPA General List
Subject: Re: [WISPA] Virtual AP

It is as simple as knowing the MAC addy of your Access Point. You would 
have to be either pretty stupid or a complete Newbie to the wireless 
world to let a fake SSID trip you up.  

   Kurt - - if you think for one minute you are slowing them down or 
keeping them out of a specific territory  by  doing this - - you are the

Newbie :-)

Mac Dearman
Maximum Access, LLC.
www.inetsouth.com
www.radioresponse.org (Katrina relief efforts)
318-728-8600 - Rayville
318-728-9600





Tom DeReggi wrote:

>> How can I avoid my competition doing this to me?
>
>
> Yes, Hide SSID.  However, that does not help, if you are offering a 
> self signup service where seeing the SSID is what brings in the 
> subscriber in the first place.  I suggest Virtual APs, so monthly 
> subscribers can be transitioned to a different SSID. In other words 
> advertise one, and then after you qualify them and have their contact 
> info, mail them a new preferred SSID to use, that is not broadcasted.
>
> But the only real thing you can do about it is to deploy gear that 
> does not have that limitation. One of the reasons, we deploy Trango, 
> that has connection security built in.
>
> Tom DeReggi
> RapidDSL & Wireless, Inc
> IntAirNet- Fixed Wireless Broadband
>
>
> - Original Message - From: "Brian Rohrbacher" 
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: "WISPA General List" 
> Sent: Tuesday, December 27, 2005 11:17 PM
> Subject: Re: [WISPA] Virtual AP
>
>
>> How can I avoid my competition doing this to me?  Hide SSID and 
>> change it every so often?
>>
>> Tom DeReggi wrote:
>>
>>> I have to agree with John. I can't see the benefit of resorting to 
>>> those type of poor neighbor policies. First off, I'd be embaressed 
>>> to admit it openly on the list. Second you are borderlining on 
>>> legality. You just provided evidence that you purposely attempt to 
>>> degrade another businesses ability to do business, where you'd 
>>> likely lose now in a suit for tortuous interference (or what ever 
>>> that is called), if ever taken up against you. Secondly, anything 
>>> you do to them, ultimately can be done back to you, if they get work

>>> of your tactics.
>>>
>>> Its been proven many time over, that friendly neighbor policies far 
>>> better mutually benefit WISPs.  I'd advise re-tinking your strategy.
>>>
>>> At minimum, if the goal was to get your competitors's clients to 
>>> associate to you, the las tthing you'd want to point out to them is 
>>> that your network would be vulnerable to the same tactics that your 
>>> neighbor was. You expose the flaws in Wifi, and you ALSO provide 
>>> wifi. If you insisted on tactics to steal their association, you'd 
>>> be much better off, having their clients connect to you, and then 
>>> you pass them to your captive portal signup page, with a splash page

>>> for better rates and/or performance options, with an option to 
>>> continue at low bandwdith.  The last thing you want to do is play 
>>> Thug tactics, (sorta like mafia protection money), stating we are 
>>> the ones destroying your ability to use the Internet, pay us, or 
>>> don't communicate at all. No one wants to buy service from someone 
>>> that they've developed animosity towards.
>>>
>>> Tom DeReggi
>>> RapidDSL & Wireless, Inc
>>> IntAirNet- Fixed Wireless Broadband
>>>
>>> - Original Message - From: "John Scrivner"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>>> To: "WISPA General List" 
>>> Sent: Tuesday, December 27, 2005 12:27 PM
>>> Subject: Re: [WISPA] Virtual AP
>>>
>>>
>>>> Short of frustrating potential customers I cannot fathom what 
>>>> positive effect this process has. Please enlighten me how this is a

>>>> good thing to do.
>>>> Scriv
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Kurt Fankhauser wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> I do that too, 3 competitors have towers all within ¼ mile of each

>>>>> other, I put their ssid in my AP b

Re: [WISPA] Virtual AP

2005-12-28 Thread George

Kurt
Your killing me.

This has to be the lowest underhanded thing I've heard on these list 
from a fellow wisp.


The goal to win is a fine goal, but winning by cheating is not a win at 
all, it's an admission of failure.


You need to understand that integrity and success go hand in hand.

Shaking my head.

George

And I only let you off lightly because your a young kid,


Kurt Fankhauser wrote:
I do that too, 3 competitors have towers all within ¼ mile of each 
other, I put their ssid in my AP but turn the broadcast off, their 
clients associate to me and I deny all their access so when they try to 
hook up customers it looks like their connected but they cant figure out 
why it doesn’t work, keeps them from signing up clients in my area.


 


Kurt Fankhauser

WAVELINC

114 S. Walnut St.

Bucyrus, OH 44820

419-562-6405

www.wavelinc.com

 


-Original Message-
*From:* [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
*On Behalf Of *Rick Smith

*Sent:* Tuesday, December 27, 2005 8:12 AM
*To:* 'WISPA General List'
*Subject:* RE: [WISPA] Virtual AP

 

actually, I was kidding about the competitor thing, wanted to see if 
it'd start a fire.  It's something I'd thought of, but you can't route 
based on Virtual AP SSID


 

Having an invididual hotspot page per virtual SSID would be cool, on a 
wholesale level...


 




*From:* [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
*On Behalf Of *Scott Reed

*Sent:* Tuesday, December 27, 2005 10:44 AM
*To:* WISPA General List
*Subject:* RE: [WISPA] Virtual AP

What happens when a potential customer sees the competition's name? They 
call the competitor who says, "We don't do that."  Then what, do you get 
called by the competitor?
I guess my question is, how does advertising the competitor's name help 
you?


I like the wholesale idea though.  I may have to pursue that in the future.

Scott Reed
Owner
NewWays
Wireless Networking
Network Design, Installation and Administration
www.nwwnet.net <http://www.nwwnet.net/>

The season is Christmas, not X-mas, not the holiday, but Christmas, because
Christ was born to provide salvation to all who will believe!

*-- Original Message ---*
From: Rick Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "'WISPA General List'" 
Sent: Tue, 27 Dec 2005 10:15:08 -0500
Subject: RE: [WISPA] Virtual AP

 Yep, I create virtual SSIDs for all my competitors names (they only do 

DSL) :)


 I also wholesale service off one of my towers via 2.4 and 900 mhz to a 

local computer guy that likes to see his name "in the air" -

 the virtual SSID thing was a natural win...

 Not sure about the broadcast thing...haven't seen a performance hit 

because of the virtual ssid's ...

 R

 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 

On Behalf Of Pete Davis

 Sent: Tuesday, December 27, 2005 9:57 AM
 To: WISPA General List
 Subject: [WISPA] Virtual AP

 Mikrotik APs have the capability to create a "Virtual AP" with a 

secondary SSID, but I haven't found much documentation about it.


 Has anyone used this feature much? I could see this being useful 

during a transitional period, while you are changing the SSID, so

 you can access the CPE with the "old" ssid.
 I could also see this being useful for colocating two companies on the 

same tower/AP, like if you have an ISP geared toward
 residential service, and another company name/marketing scheme for 

business customers.
 I don't know what kind of performance impact there is when you create 

a bunch of APs on one radio.


 I had a wierd thought about this, however: If I have 40 clients on an 

AP, and set up 40 "virtual AP's" on the network with each
 client on his own SSID, do they count as 40 PTP links, allowing me to 

kick up the antenna gain like with the CPE?


 Does the virtual AP really broadcast a secondary SSID, or does it 

switch between the two rapidly, kind of like a poor man's Time

 Division Multiplexing.

 Pete Davis
 NoDial.net
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RE: [WISPA] Virtual AP

2005-12-29 Thread Kurt Fankhauser
I did it to expose the problems associated with 802.11b/g which is a
technology that was NOT designed for what it is being used for today. I
think several people on the list realized what tricks can be done with
the SSID and now they are smarter because I posted it. The whole point
of the post is that you need to use a proprietary solution that was
designed for WISP usage. If you were a professional WISP you would be
using such solution and thus YOU and YOUR customers would not be subject
to someone doing this to you.

Kurt Fankhauser
WAVELINC
114 S. Walnut St.
Bucyrus, OH 44820
419-562-6405
www.wavelinc.com


-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of George
Sent: Wednesday, December 28, 2005 11:14 PM
To: WISPA General List
Subject: Re: [WISPA] Virtual AP

Kurt
Your killing me.

This has to be the lowest underhanded thing I've heard on these list 
from a fellow wisp.

The goal to win is a fine goal, but winning by cheating is not a win at 
all, it's an admission of failure.

You need to understand that integrity and success go hand in hand.

Shaking my head.

George

And I only let you off lightly because your a young kid,


Kurt Fankhauser wrote:
> I do that too, 3 competitors have towers all within ¼ mile of each 
> other, I put their ssid in my AP but turn the broadcast off, their 
> clients associate to me and I deny all their access so when they try
to 
> hook up customers it looks like their connected but they cant figure
out 
> why it doesn’t work, keeps them from signing up clients in my area.
> 
>  
> 
> Kurt Fankhauser
> 
> WAVELINC
> 
> 114 S. Walnut St.
> 
> Bucyrus, OH 44820
> 
> 419-562-6405
> 
> www.wavelinc.com
> 
>  
> 
> -Original Message-
> *From:* [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]

> *On Behalf Of *Rick Smith
> *Sent:* Tuesday, December 27, 2005 8:12 AM
> *To:* 'WISPA General List'
> *Subject:* RE: [WISPA] Virtual AP
> 
>  
> 
> actually, I was kidding about the competitor thing, wanted to see if 
> it'd start a fire.  It's something I'd thought of, but you can't route

> based on Virtual AP SSID
> 
>  
> 
> Having an invididual hotspot page per virtual SSID would be cool, on a

> wholesale level...
> 
>  
> 
>

> 
> *From:* [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]

> *On Behalf Of *Scott Reed
> *Sent:* Tuesday, December 27, 2005 10:44 AM
> *To:* WISPA General List
> *Subject:* RE: [WISPA] Virtual AP
> 
> What happens when a potential customer sees the competition's name?
They 
> call the competitor who says, "We don't do that."  Then what, do you
get 
> called by the competitor?
> I guess my question is, how does advertising the competitor's name
help 
> you?
> 
> I like the wholesale idea though.  I may have to pursue that in the
future.
> 
> Scott Reed
> Owner
> NewWays
> Wireless Networking
> Network Design, Installation and Administration
> www.nwwnet.net <http://www.nwwnet.net/>
> 
> The season is Christmas, not X-mas, not the holiday, but Christmas,
because
> Christ was born to provide salvation to all who will believe!
> 
> *-- Original Message ---*
> From: Rick Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: "'WISPA General List'" 
> Sent: Tue, 27 Dec 2005 10:15:08 -0500
> Subject: RE: [WISPA] Virtual AP
> 
>>  Yep, I create virtual SSIDs for all my competitors names (they only
do 
> DSL) :)
>>
>>  I also wholesale service off one of my towers via 2.4 and 900 mhz to
a 
> local computer guy that likes to see his name "in the air" -
>>  the virtual SSID thing was a natural win...
>>
>>  Not sure about the broadcast thing...haven't seen a performance hit 
> because of the virtual ssid's ...
>>  R
>>
>>  -Original Message-
>>  From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]

> On Behalf Of Pete Davis
>>  Sent: Tuesday, December 27, 2005 9:57 AM
>>  To: WISPA General List
>>  Subject: [WISPA] Virtual AP
>>
>>  Mikrotik APs have the capability to create a "Virtual AP" with a 
> secondary SSID, but I haven't found much documentation about it.
>>
>>  Has anyone used this feature much? I could see this being useful 
> during a transitional period, while you are changing the SSID, so
>>  you can access the CPE with the "old" ssid.
>>  I could also see this being useful for colocating two companies on
the 
> same tower/AP, like if you have an ISP geared toward
>>  residential service, and another company name/marketing scheme for 
> busi

Re: [WISPA] Virtual AP

2005-12-29 Thread Blair Davis




The downside of proprietary systems is the being 'held hostage' to the
one manufacture  As some of us have already discovered.

And just because you have a network based on 'proprietary system',
don't think you are 'safe'.  You are not.

Blair

Kurt Fankhauser wrote:

  I did it to expose the problems associated with 802.11b/g which is a
technology that was NOT designed for what it is being used for today. I
think several people on the list realized what tricks can be done with
the SSID and now they are smarter because I posted it. The whole point
of the post is that you need to use a proprietary solution that was
designed for WISP usage. If you were a professional WISP you would be
using such solution and thus YOU and YOUR customers would not be subject
to someone doing this to you.

Kurt Fankhauser
WAVELINC
114 S. Walnut St.
Bucyrus, OH 44820
419-562-6405
www.wavelinc.com


-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] On
Behalf Of George
Sent: Wednesday, December 28, 2005 11:14 PM
To: WISPA General List
Subject: Re: [WISPA] Virtual AP

Kurt
Your killing me.

This has to be the lowest underhanded thing I've heard on these list 
from a fellow wisp.

The goal to win is a fine goal, but winning by cheating is not a win at 
all, it's an admission of failure.

You need to understand that integrity and success go hand in hand.

Shaking my head.

George

And I only let you off lightly because your a young kid,


Kurt Fankhauser wrote:
  
  
I do that too, 3 competitors have towers all within ¼ mile of each 
other, I put their ssid in my AP but turn the broadcast off, their 
clients associate to me and I deny all their access so when they try

  
  to 
  
  
hook up customers it looks like their connected but they cant figure

  
  out 
  
  
why it doesn’t work, keeps them from signing up clients in my area.

 

Kurt Fankhauser

WAVELINC

114 S. Walnut St.

Bucyrus, OH 44820

419-562-6405

www.wavelinc.com

 

-Original Message-
*From:* [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]

  
  
  
  
*On Behalf Of *Rick Smith
*Sent:* Tuesday, December 27, 2005 8:12 AM
*To:* 'WISPA General List'
*Subject:* RE: [WISPA] Virtual AP

 

actually, I was kidding about the competitor thing, wanted to see if 
it'd start a fire.  It's something I'd thought of, but you can't route

  
  
  
  
based on Virtual AP SSID

 

Having an invididual hotspot page per virtual SSID would be cool, on a

  
  
  
  
wholesale level...

 



  
  
  
  
*From:* [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]

  
  
  
  
*On Behalf Of *Scott Reed
*Sent:* Tuesday, December 27, 2005 10:44 AM
*To:* WISPA General List
*Subject:* RE: [WISPA] Virtual AP

What happens when a potential customer sees the competition's name?

  
  They 
  
  
call the competitor who says, "We don't do that."  Then what, do you

  
  get 
  
  
called by the competitor?
I guess my question is, how does advertising the competitor's name

  
  help 
  
  
you?

I like the wholesale idea though.  I may have to pursue that in the

  
  future.
  
  
Scott Reed
Owner
NewWays
Wireless Networking
Network Design, Installation and Administration
www.nwwnet.net 

The season is Christmas, not X-mas, not the holiday, but Christmas,

  
  because
  
  
Christ was born to provide salvation to all who will believe!

*-- Original Message ---*
From: Rick Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "'WISPA General List'" 
Sent: Tue, 27 Dec 2005 10:15:08 -0500
Subject: RE: [WISPA] Virtual AP



   Yep, I create virtual SSIDs for all my competitors names (they only
  

  
  do 
  
  
DSL) :)


   I also wholesale service off one of my towers via 2.4 and 900 mhz to
  

  
  a 
  
  
local computer guy that likes to see his name "in the air" -


   the virtual SSID thing was a natural win...

 Not sure about the broadcast thing...haven't seen a performance hit 
  

because of the virtual ssid's ...


   R

 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
  

  
  
  
  
On Behalf Of Pete Davis


   Sent: Tuesday, December 27, 2005 9:57 AM
 To: WISPA General List
 Subject: [WISPA] Virtual AP

 Mikrotik APs have the capability to create a "Virtual AP" with a 
  

secondary SSID, but I haven't found much documentation about it.


   Has anyone used this feature much? I could see this being useful 
  

during a transitional period, while you are changing the SSID, so


   you can access the CPE with the "old" ssid.
 I could a

Re: [WISPA] Virtual AP

2005-12-29 Thread Brett Hays



I still rest better at night knowing my network 
doesn't show up in every teenager's copy of Netstumbler..

  - Original Message - 
  From: 
  Blair Davis 

  To: WISPA General List 
  Sent: Thursday, December 29, 2005 10:43 
  AM
  Subject: Re: [WISPA] Virtual AP
  The downside of proprietary systems is the being 'held hostage' 
  to the one manufacture  As some of us have already 
  discovered.And just because you have a network based on 'proprietary 
  system', don't think you are 'safe'.  You are 
  not.BlairKurt Fankhauser wrote: 
  I did it to expose the problems associated with 802.11b/g which is a
technology that was NOT designed for what it is being used for today. I
think several people on the list realized what tricks can be done with
the SSID and now they are smarter because I posted it. The whole point
of the post is that you need to use a proprietary solution that was
designed for WISP usage. If you were a professional WISP you would be
using such solution and thus YOU and YOUR customers would not be subject
to someone doing this to you.

Kurt Fankhauser
WAVELINC
114 S. Walnut St.
Bucyrus, OH 44820
419-562-6405
www.wavelinc.com


-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] On
Behalf Of George
Sent: Wednesday, December 28, 2005 11:14 PM
To: WISPA General List
Subject: Re: [WISPA] Virtual AP

Kurt
Your killing me.

This has to be the lowest underhanded thing I've heard on these list 
from a fellow wisp.

The goal to win is a fine goal, but winning by cheating is not a win at 
all, it's an admission of failure.

You need to understand that integrity and success go hand in hand.

Shaking my head.

George

And I only let you off lightly because your a young kid,


Kurt Fankhauser wrote:
  
I do that too, 3 competitors have towers all within ¼ mile of each 
other, I put their ssid in my AP but turn the broadcast off, their 
clients associate to me and I deny all their access so when they try
to 
  
hook up customers it looks like their connected but they cant figure
out 
  
why it doesn’t work, keeps them from signing up clients in my area.

 

Kurt Fankhauser

WAVELINC

114 S. Walnut St.

Bucyrus, OH 44820

419-562-6405

www.wavelinc.com

 

-Original Message-
*From:* [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]

  
*On Behalf Of *Rick Smith
*Sent:* Tuesday, December 27, 2005 8:12 AM
*To:* 'WISPA General List'
*Subject:* RE: [WISPA] Virtual AP

 

actually, I was kidding about the competitor thing, wanted to see if 
it'd start a fire.  It's something I'd thought of, but you can't route

  
based on Virtual AP SSID

 

Having an invididual hotspot page per virtual SSID would be cool, on a

  
wholesale level...

 



  
*From:* [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]

  
*On Behalf Of *Scott Reed
*Sent:* Tuesday, December 27, 2005 10:44 AM
*To:* WISPA General List
*Subject:* RE: [WISPA] Virtual AP

What happens when a potential customer sees the competition's name?
They 
  
call the competitor who says, "We don't do that."  Then what, do you
get 
  
called by the competitor?
I guess my question is, how does advertising the competitor's name
help 
  
you?

I like the wholesale idea though.  I may have to pursue that in the
future.
  
Scott Reed
Owner
NewWays
Wireless Networking
Network Design, Installation and Administration
www.nwwnet.net 

The season is Christmas, not X-mas, not the holiday, but Christmas,
because
  
Christ was born to provide salvation to all who will believe!

*-- Original Message ---*
From: Rick Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "'WISPA General List'" 
Sent: Tue, 27 Dec 2005 10:15:08 -0500
Subject: RE: [WISPA] Virtual AP


   Yep, I create virtual SSIDs for all my competitors names (they only
  do 
  
DSL) :)

   I also wholesale service off one of my towers via 2.4 and 900 mhz to
  a 
  
local computer guy that likes to see his name "in the air" -

   the virtual SSID thing was a natural win...

 Not sure about the broadcast thing...haven't seen a performance hit 
  because of the virtual ssid's ...

   R

 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
  
  
On Behalf Of Pete Davis

   Sent: Tuesday, December 27, 2005 9:57 AM
 To: WISPA General List
 Subject: [WISPA] Virtual AP

 Mikrotik APs have the capability to create a "Virtual AP" with a 
  secondary SSID, but I haven't found much documentation about it.

   Has anyone used this feature much? I could see this being useful 
  during a transitional period, while you are changing the SSID, so