One customer that knows enough to be dangerous runs around town telling 20
people they hate your service.
From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On Behalf
Of Justin Wilson
Sent: Friday, April 27, 2012 1:11 PM
To: WISPA General List
Subject: Re: [WISPA] Customer
We use mainly Linksys units. They are a bit more expensive but we don't deal
with warranty issues etc.
I'll install them at hookup if the customer wants one.
We've been trying the ones from Readylink but so far the jury is out on them.
Sometimes they work nicely, other customers have nothing
We sell our customers routers, both Netgear and Linksys. We charge $100
and guarantee the router for as long as they are on the service with us.
Linksys seem to have a much higher failure rate than the Netgear units.
Netgear routers do pppoe better and more reliably.
__
Marlon,
In response to your statement:
Some days I just wish the POE had a wifi router built into it so we
could include wifi like the telco does these days.
ARC makes one. It's the iFlex indoor AP. You could use any brand of
POE (including Moto) from 9-24VDC to power the device and then
Check your configuration> installed over twenty and didn't have a problem
with any of them after upgrading to the llatest firmware. Upgrade if
you haven't and you will be fine.
On Thu, Apr 26, 2012 at 7:31 PM, Darin Steffl wrote:
> Hey guys,
>
> What are some of you providing for customer wirel
Hmmm, anyone using them? Who stocks them?
What do you do, plug your own power brick into it? That would kind of defete
the purpose wouldn't it? That's not really much different than a standard
install.
thanks,
marlon
- Original Message -
From: Ryan McKenzie
To: WISPA General
Looks to be powered by the stock cpe's poe. We need one that does both.
--- On Mon, 4/30/12, Marlon K. Schafer (509-982-2181)
wrote:
From: Marlon K. Schafer (509-982-2181)
Subject: Re: [WISPA] Customer Routers
To: "WISPA General List"
Date: Monday, April 30, 2012, 5:00 PM
Hmmm, anyone
The iFlex ships with a 24V. 07A POE brick. That plugs into 120VAC, and
allows you to run 100m of cat5 where you can install the iFlex indoor
AP. Perhaps you don't want your indoor AP broadcasting from where it is
plugged in.
Then you can run an additional 100m to the roof where the iFlex wil