I have two brand new never used I'm trying to get rid of make an offer
off list and they are probably yours.
Thank You,
Cameron Kilton
WISPA Wants You! Join today!
http://signup.wispa.org/
Ceragon has a very good name, but is much more expensive than Dragonwave
(and honestly I have a hard time finding the value proposition to Ceragon
over Dragonwave... even though I sell Ceragon gear)
Hehe...I might argue the same of Trango vs Dragonwave =)
Ceragon and Dragonwave will probably be
Hi Bob,
I don't think Trango will be a good fit considering the 20-25 mile link
distances, 18 Ghz. and the reduced tx power compared to others in the
lower bands.
You forget that Travis lives in RF Nirvana
In RF Nirvana, 38 GHz goes 15 miles and 18 GHz 30 miles with 99.999% uptime
-Charles
Hi Bob,
I personally would use an all ODU version because it makes servicing a
breeze and also swapping out a bad radio quick and simple. No guessing
about is it the indoor unit, is it the outdoor unit, is it the interface
cable??? Get an all ODU like the Dragonwave Horizon and you run CAT5
and
Hi Tom,
XO has owned frequencies (LMDS) -- totally different ball-game
-Charles
-Original Message-
From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On Behalf
Of Tom DeReggi
Sent: Monday, January 19, 2009 6:12 PM
To: WISPA General List
Subject: Re: [WISPA]
Hi Tom,
But that is not my point. I personally do not think that peak capacity is
the big factor in a buying decission for WISPs..
Once you are in the 400mb + range, over subscription is your friend.
I would argue that after taking Matt L out of the equation, 100 Mb FD is more
than enough for
Hi Brad,
Half mile? Ours is almost 2.5miles in an RF unfriendly rain zone. The link
has been up for more than a year and the client has been thrilled. So
thrilled in fact that we've got another planned for them with a roadmap of
more to follow.
Being the devil's advocate
I recently priced
Josh Luthman wrote:
Many client radios can do pppoe as well as Windows has it's own pppoe
client I am told that works quite well.
(not trolling)
PPPOE requires extra configuration for every client, requires extra
configuration at every tower, and yields relatively little practical
benefit -
Brad,
I agree to a point.
But we could be competing with FIOS to the Home, with lower price 60 and
80Ghz products.
Look at Xbox, using technology that once only the military or Hollywood
could afford, but now is bring satisfaction to millions of kids (and adults)
nationwide.
Technology is all
Hello Charles,
Come on Charles you should know the answer to your question: Location,
Location, Location.
Some of our clients have forgotten about more fiber laid than a mid-size
Telco, but fiber is not always feasible. Railroads, runways, rivers and a
number of other factors can eliminate
I really don't get the love affair with PPPOE; I assume there's
something I'm missing, and I've always been curious as to what.
There is a lot of cool things you can do with radius / pppoe systems, change an
IP if they haven't paid which can redirect customers to non-payment portals,
use
Jeremy Davis wrote:
I really don't get the love affair with PPPOE; I assume there's
something I'm missing, and I've always been curious as to what.
There is a lot of cool things you can do with radius / pppoe systems, change
an IP if they haven't paid which can redirect customers to
I just don't see which of those you can't do with simple DHCP and
RADIUS, and that's a lot easier for the customer. The customer doesn't
have to set up a PPPOE client on their PC or router or Xbox 360 or
whatever dumb network appliance they just bought for seventeen bucks on
eBay; they plug
Anyone has the specs for the old Breezecom PI-CAT-5 POE accesory? what
are the current voltages?
Im looking into the unit with adjustable output power ...
Gino A. Villarini
g...@aeronetpr.com
Aeronet Wireless Broadband Corp.
tel 787.273.4143 fax 787.273.4145
I like to do both. Preference is pppoe but if they don't have a router we do
dhcp. But with todays radios we often set the radio up to do pppoe.
One of the nice thing with pppoe is its easy to segregate the clients and
firewall them and quickly track down an virus infected user and prevent
Simply put - everything is in one pot. There are also many capabilities.
One thing I see as a major benefit is the simplicity of CALEA
captures. No extra work for what's already in place.
On 1/20/09, e...@wisp-router.com e...@wisp-router.com wrote:
I like to do both. Preference is pppoe but
Not really, but is everyone else seeing lots of extra traffic from
people streaming inauguration-related events in DC? My network is
pulling basically double the traffic of a normal Tuesday.
(There's a lesson about capacity planning in here somewhere...)
David Smith
MVN.net
Everyone on NANOG has been saying the same. We're actually seeing close to
triple on downloading today, starting about 9AM EST.
Thankfully no issues on capacity at all on our end...
I'm actually surprised the sites serving the videos aren't having any issues
yet.
-Original Message-
Everyone on NANOG has been saying the same. We're actually seeing close to
triple on downloading today, starting about 9AM EST.
Thankfully no issues on capacity at all on our end... That's where I stole the
idea for this email from :)
NANOG tends to be bigger operators, and I thought this
cross-posting from outages list:
http://www.akamai.com/html/technology/nui/news/index.html
Patrick Shoemaker
Vector Data Systems LLC
shoemak...@vectordatasystems.com
office: (301) 358-1690 x36
http://www.vectordatasystems.com
David E. Smith wrote:
Not really, but is everyone else seeing lots
I spoke before the millmeter wave IWPC group about 3 years ago. My message
to them was to stop selling at high margins per radio pair and sell millions
of units at lower margins. They thought I was nuts. I met a guy from Intel
who was making millimeter wave radio devices out of CMOS instead of
I think Hulu (at least) was having problems. We had a viewing party
in our conference room. I had ABC over-the-air on the projector, but
kept a computer streaming Hulu on backup. It seemed to be
consistently about a minute behind the live broadcast.
A few seconds delay seems reasonable to
John Valenti wrote:
I think Hulu (at least) was having problems. We had a viewing party
in our conference room. I had ABC over-the-air on the projector, but
kept a computer streaming Hulu on backup. It seemed to be
consistently about a minute behind the live broadcast.
On election
John,
Your insight hit the nail on the head. Unfortuntately, the current dominent
manufacturers in 80G don't get it yet.
The year after at IWPC, there was one manufacturer, Huber+Suhner, that
appeared to get it. They discovered a super low cost method to make 60-80Ghz
antennas, taht could be
Well some of the sites generating the video, aren't having any problems
with congestion. Its because they chose small local companies to design
solutions that bypassed the congestion of traditional carriers. For example,
RapidDSLWireless with the help of state of the art wireless radio
Tom,
Please write up a press release about this and I will place it on the
webpage. Good Job!
Rick
-Original Message-
From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On
Behalf Of Tom DeReggi
Sent: Tuesday, January 20, 2009 3:01 PM
To: WISPA General List
Subject:
Please do enlighten us of this latest special.
- Matt
Charles Wu (CTI) wrote:
I just received an email from a vendor that sells competing products to
Trango. The email said: I don't know if you are aware of this but Trango
just recently let their complete engineering staff go so you may want
Hi Matt,
Missed you at AF this year -- saw your tree presentation though
In lieu of violating list protocol, I would recommend that you ask Adam -- he
should know all about it
-Charles
-Original Message-
From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On Behalf
I really hate when this happens.
:-)
Charles Wu (CTI) wrote:
Hi Matt,
Missed you at AF this year -- saw your tree presentation though
In lieu of violating list protocol, I would recommend that you ask Adam -- he
should know all about it
-Charles
-Original Message-
From:
We have a tower with a single radio operating on it. We were using a
Microtik 133 board with a single Prizim chipset in it. One day it
stopped responding to requests through the network using Winbox. No
customers were down so we assumed it was running bandwidth (too much
snow to travel up
* Forbes Mercy wrote, On 1/20/2009 7:00 PM:
snip
Took a back-up 433AH board up and used the same radio card, worked like
a charm for both our access and customer throughput. We didn't want to
waste a three port/LAN board so ordered a 433a single port board. Once
it arrived we logged into
Hi Forbes
A few questions/comments:
:
How long is the ethernet run?
About 50 feet
We had a MTK client radio on an RB113 go irratic at times.
We brought the 133 back into the office and had no problem accessing it
with short length Cat 5 and the wireless worked great, same for the new
433A
Oops let me correct myself I've been saying 433a, it's actually a 411a.
The board that is working is the 433ah.
-Original Message-
From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On
Behalf Of Leon D. Zetekoff, NCE
Sent: Tuesday, January 20, 2009 4:21 PM
To: WISPA
We knew what you meant because the 433 has three ports and 411 has one.
I do suggest putting a 433ah up there if you plan to have some good
usage. Saving 50 dollars isn't worth playing with the board upgrade
game for the capacity it provides.
If the 433ah does work then your line is probably
Could it be that the board is getting to low a voltage?
Sent from my iPhone
On Jan 20, 2009, at 7:00 PM, Forbes Mercy forbes.me...@wabroadband.com
wrote:
We have a tower with a single radio operating on it. We were using a
Microtik 133 board with a single Prizim chipset in it. One day
Remember the 411AH and the 433AH are EXACTLY the same with two
exceptions, less Ethernet and wireless ports and micro-sd slot.
* ---
Dennis Burgess, CCNA, A+, Mikrotik Certified Trainer
WISPA Board Member - wispa.org http://www.wispa.org/
The board works at 18v and there's only one wireless card. At 50ft or
even 500ft you're not losing 1v.
I'm betting you have a 24v poe?
On 1/20/09, Dennis Burgess - LinkTechs dmburg...@linktechs.net wrote:
Remember the 411AH and the 433AH are EXACTLY the same with two
exceptions, less Ethernet
Looks pretty normal around here. But some of our towers are offline again
due to all of the power outages.
marlon
- Original Message -
From: Eric Tykwinski eric-l...@truenet.com
To: 'WISPA General List' wireless@wispa.org
Sent: Tuesday, January 20, 2009 9:52 AM
Subject: Re: [WISPA]
Oh goody. Look what I get to go home to from Hutton/EC expo.
http://www.krem.com/topstories/stories/krem2-012009-wilbur.130e8cb9.html
I hope I have time to run up there on Thursday and take come more pics.
I've got some pretty amazing ones already. And the frost was 1/3rd as thick
on
Don't you have battery back ups?
Marlon K. Schafer wrote:
Looks pretty normal around here. But some of our towers are offline again
due to all of the power outages.
marlon
- Original Message -
From: Eric Tykwinski eric-l...@truenet.com
To: 'WISPA General List'
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