Geez Patrick, go to bed!!! Get some rest
Seriously, this is a great list. Definitely shows how the VL is a
completely different animal than the other options out there.
Matt Larsen
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Patrick Leary wrote:
I believe most if not all of the below are features not found
Carl A Jeptha wrote:
My upstream is trying to obtain a set of ip numbers to use between
ourselves, but ARIN is rejecting the application because they feel that
we do not require or have use for our own ip numbers.
If you're trying to get the IPs for your network, you should probably
apply
I see that now. I was then looking at the 532 but the spec sheet on the web
does not list power consumption limits? Does anyone know if a RB532 and
daughter card can handle 3 SR9's? Or a single RB 532 with 2 SR9's? I need to
sectorize a pop with 3 120 sectors each into a SR9 and I want to stay as
We ourselves, right now need 32. And no, we are not multi-homed.
You have a Good Day now,
Carl A Jeptha
http://www.airnet.ca
Office Phone: 905 349-2084
Office Hours: 9:00am - 5:00pm
skype cajeptha
David E. Smith wrote:
Carl A Jeptha wrote:
My upstream is trying to obtain a set of ip
No, no...stay up! grin
Good to see Patrick decided to engage the pros and cons of the VL product!
Now maybe we can get some traction on offering up the improvements the VL
product sorely needs. Surely Alvarion wants to improve the product right?
The pros Patrick lists are certainly impressive,
Brad,
Software controlled dual polarity might be nice. Not sure why you
consistently harp on us though since no one else has it either other
than your longtime preferred vendor.
I am not as convinced about your complaint about RSSI. Is it just used
to RSSI like being used to feet in stead of
Patrick,
Rssi is very important to determine if a link is properly aligned and its
achieving its link budget.
Altough we dont use alvarion(yet), we are currently researching backhaul
options and the way we comission ptp links here is that we run the calcs on
radio mobile and spreedsheet to
I have yet to use an Alvarion radio or for that matter one without RSSI.
However, I would think that using SNR is a perfectly reasonable way to
align a link.
-Matt
G. villarini wrote:
Patrick,
Rssi is very important to determine if a link is properly aligned and its
achieving its link
Carl A Jeptha wrote:
We ourselves, right now need 32. And no, we are not multi-homed.
32, as in a total of 32 IP addresses?
If that's the case, they shouldn't need to involve ARIN at all. They
should just SWIP that little teensy allocation out of their own space to
you.
(ARIN usually
David E. Smith wrote:
(ARIN usually doesn't need to be involved unless you're working with
at least a /22 allocation, which is 1024 IPs.)
ARIN could be involved if you have a swiped /24 or bigger and want to
multi-home.
-Matt
--
WISPA Wireless List: wireless@wispa.org
I should have also noted that per the info
below, most Alvarion operators simply have a policy that they will only connect
subscribers for whom a minimum number of the green LEDs will fire and hold. For
example, having 4 for of the 8 green LEDs light should get you a link with the
best mod
The problem with SNR for alignment
purposes is that you are dealing with a variable in noise, with rssi you work
with fixed numbers. Im not dissing SNR, it is extremely important,
But for example, in order to trouble shoot a link let say I install a
Link and Im seeing a a SNR of 6 on this
Exactly, and this is can be compounded on
a new installation as you might be seeing noise or could it be you are just misaligned?
Techs are creatures of habit. They
may think 4 LED bars is all that is ever needed because thats what they
typically see. The next install they throw up a
If the general concensus is that RSSI is a
must, then I will try to convince PM to add such a reading.
Patrick Leary
AVP WISP Markets
Alvarion, Inc.
o: 650.314.2628
c: 760.580.0080
Vonage: 650.641.1243
From:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
Not to beat the horse here but I think having SNR, RSSI and Noise
readings are all things people should have in an advanced platform.
Granted if you have any two you can get the third but just having it all
right there seems logical to me. I am guessing the system could easily
derive all three
http://www.wneweb.com/wireless/wireless_mini-pci.htm
I'm interested in the DCMA-82
The MIMO stuff looks interesting too... but I dunno what you gotta do for an
antenna array...
+++
neofast.net - fast internet for North East Oregon and South East Washington
email me
Deal. For sure I will ask them to add the reading in the firmware.
Patrick Leary
AVP WISP Markets
Alvarion, Inc.
o: 650.314.2628
c: 760.580.0080
Vonage: 650.641.1243
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of John Scrivner
Sent: Sunday, September
Agreed, VL does have more niche features and some of those can be the sole
reason VL makes the cut and other products do not. As you know VLAN support
was the key feature in this particular case, but simply placing a CPE router
on site will also fill that need.
I'm a believer in the VL product,
And how about these?
http://www.zcomax.co.uk/doc/GZ-901.pdf
+++
neofast.net - fast internet for North East Oregon and South East Washington
email me at mark at neofast dot net
541-969-8200
Direct commercial inquiries to purchasing at neofast dot net
- Original
Gino,
The prices you state seem way low. I've only see nthat on temporar or Ebay
type buying.
Is their a CONSISTENT source for $225 and $550 pricing in less than 25 qty?
I believe that anyone that is required to buy in qty higher than 25 to get
best price is getting overly burdened and
Trango is no where near $400 for Atlas Foxes. Trango's Atlas Fox's distance
without dish is just about the same as the standard Canopy CPE (same DBI
antenna).
Remember that Trango lists retail on their site to protest the WISP. Low
volume WISP special pricing is granted to any WISP.
Tom
There are arguments against dual band support, as we have discussed
before, though you ridicule our sincere reasoning and call it BS (which
is why I am cautious about discussing these things with you in public).
As I said to you, our RD folks tell me that RF components that span a
broad frequency
So what is the onesy-twosy price of a Trango Atlas with an extended
range antenna? What is the price for a Canopy Advantage CPE with
extended range? I have plenty of data I've found, but there seems to be
some wide discrepancy here among you folks.
How about total cost for a Canopy cluster with
A quick look at Trango's and Alvarion's data sheets seem to show that
Alvarion has a higher receive sensitivity, which would seem to confirm
your statement.
-Matt
Patrick Leary wrote:
There are arguments against dual band support, as we have discussed
before, though you ridicule our sincere
To be fair, you shouldn't leave out OEM products from the discussion
(Mikrotik / StarOS)
These products are actually competitors to all the lines that were listed
herein.
I think the best decission, may be more relevant to what capacity that a
WISP intends to need, and finance ability for the
Are you saying that Motorola holds the financing?
Tom DeReggi
RapidDSL Wireless, Inc
IntAirNet- Fixed Wireless Broadband
- Original Message -
From: Charles Wu [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: 'WISPA General List' wireless@wispa.org
Sent: Saturday, September 23, 2006 11:18 AM
Subject: RE:
No it gives you 10 or 10 half duplex, which is a big difference. Symetrical
does not necessarilly mean at the same time.
Comcast and Verizon use oversubscription the their advantage in marketing,
we use Half Duplex.
Tom DeReggi
RapidDSL Wireless, Inc
IntAirNet- Fixed Wireless Broadband
These are good and important questions Tom. I think StarOS and Mikrotik
offer tremendous value for some WISPs, but it really depends. One big
thing it depends on is the operator's exit strategy. Once that money is
spent on a home brew solution, I'm not sure it ever comes back.
BreezeACCESS VL is
Hi Tom. What hardware features are you
referring to?
Patrick
This footnote confirms that this email message has been scanned by
PineApp Mail-SeCure for the presence of malicious code,
Tom,
I can give you some Canopy buying tips off line ...
Also I would like to add that the $150 Trango fox is basically useless with
the Dish, putting its true price to $250 or so ...
Gino A. Villarini
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Aeronet Wireless Broadband Corp.
tel 787.273.4143 fax 787.273.4145
Tom, Can you achieve a solid link with the Trango Atals Fox for more than 1
mile ?
Gino A. Villarini
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Aeronet Wireless Broadband Corp.
tel 787.273.4143 fax 787.273.4145
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Tom DeReggi
Trango Atlas CPE with dish $250?
Canopy with dish $275
Canopy Advantage Cluster:
6 Ap's @ $1500 each = $9k (you can start your pop with a fcc certified omni
unit for $2.7k and evolve to a full sector later)
CMM Micro for Power and Sync = $1.5k *optional
BAM - Prizm = $2k *optional
The CMM Micro
.
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Gino A. Villarini
Sent: Sunday, September 24, 2006 3:44 PM
To: 'WISPA General List'
Subject: RE: [WISPA] vendor specs
Trango Atlas CPE with dish $250?
Canopy with dish $275
Canopy Advantage Cluster:
6
Hi all,
I just have to say how much I enjoy working in the WISP
marketplace. One of my customers had a power supply failure this
weekend. No inexpensive way to get a replacement to them, and no, no
spare on hand. I looked at our client map and saw Mount Vernon.net
was close to them. One
the answer is hire a company to do installations for you. if
your employee just happens to own that company, well, oh well…
It’s all invoices. Pay them as normal, and you don’t need to
worry about taxes, etc. Your employee (or sub’d company J…) does
that on their own.
From:
Patrick,
Good list. One question that I have...
Does the VL use polling or is it CSMA/CA?
Your list says it is not some basic CSMA/CA but does that mean it is
or is not CSMA/CA?
Thanks very much,
jack
Patrick Leary wrote:
I believe most if not all of the below are
So like I suggested before simply put another $40 Atheros radio in there
tuned to 5.3GHz. This has been mentioned before by more than just me.
How is that a simple CM9 (Atheros radio) is capable of 5.3GHz and 5.8GHz
with little or no degradation? I think your RD folks are not being as
lolyou are kidding right Patrick?
Brad
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf
Of Patrick Leary
Sent: Sunday, September 24, 2006
5:03 PM
To: WISPA General List
Subject: RE: [WISPA] vendor specs
Hi Tom. What hardware
features are you
Yes, Motorola provides a service to any customer that purchases or has
a canopy product installed for service. This is a $40 mail in rebate
that has to have a unique MAC address of the radio installed supplied.
The end customer receives this rebate from Motorola. The ISP is
prohibited from
Whats to kid about? What features? Unless
plastic with little options or choice except those ungainly reflectors are
considered a benefit in the hardware.
Patrick
From:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Brad Belton
Sent: Sunday, September 24, 2006
6:45
Ahhh... there's always a catch... so now Motorola has your customer's
address and can use that for their own marketing, etc. without you ever
knowing. They could possibly even sell the list to someone (ClearWire)
down the road and you would never know.
Travis
Microserv
Anthony Will wrote:
Speaking of Clearwire, folks here are aware that Motorola now owns
NextNet, the hardware supplier to Clearwire (that once was part of
Clearwire, at least in ownership terms), right? The purchase was IN
ADDITION to the $300M investment Motorola made into Clearwire
No, it is my understanding that within the contractual terms of the
agreement they are not allowed to directly solicit or sell my customers
information.
Anthony Will
Travis Johnson wrote:
Ahhh... there's always a catch... so now Motorola has your customer's
address and can use that for their
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