Looks like you may have TSPEC enabled, which makes sense.
TSPEC is also global.
http://mrncciew.com/2013/03/19/tspec/
I wonder if the iPhone is not using TSPEC.
Kevin McCormick
Western Illinois University
On 3/11/2016 1:36 PM, Shayne Fedorka wrote:
Anyone else getting a lot of the
Anyone else getting a lot of the following log entries on your WLC?
VoIP Call Failure: '12:34:56:78:9a:bc' client, detected by 'AP-Building-Room'
AP on radio type '802.11b/g'. Reason: 'Call failed: TPSEC QOS Policy does not
match'.
A quick search indicates this is caused by a QoS policy
Oh no, I’m not advocating a “DIY” WiFi… just that it’s frustrating that our
budget cycles are 5-10 years, but technology, wireless specifically, should be
more of a phased 2-3 year budget cycle.
From: Lee H Badman [mailto:lhbad...@syr.edu]
Sent: Friday, March 11, 2016 10:25 AM
To:
Part of the frustration is that end-user WiFi is adapted quicker than budgets
and hardware refresh can be done. (802.11AC laptops quicker than new APs can
be budgeted, bought, and physically deployed).
From: The EDUCAUSE Wireless Issues Constituent Group Listserv
At Michigan we've gone with the 'Provide great wifi all over the place'
model because
- It's what the students expect
- We know we can provide a better experience if it's centrally controlled
- We know we'll get support calls if we don't, regardless of policy.
And by providing great
Vikki,
The eduroam-US team will help you as much as possible during the entire process.
We have self service configuration tools and testing tools at www.eduroam.us
that you will be able to access once you join.
Also there is an eduroam admin list (netplus-eduroam-adm...@internet2.edu) that
you
When we did the campus wide Wi-Fi at University of Tennessee back in 2001, we
decided to not cover student housing.
A few years later an inspired CIO, under the pressure of the student body,
asked to provide Wi-Fi in the lobby of each student housing property.
For two years our help desk was
On Fri, Mar 11, 2016 at 09:40:05AM -0500, Vikki Cutrone wrote:
> We are going down the Eduroam path and most of the information
> available for configuration is pretty comprehensive. Two
> Questions - We are planning our radius server as Debian 7 Wheezy
> with FreeRadius. Are their any gotcha's
Drexel University is a global research university, w/ roughly 77 acres in an
urban environment (Philadelphia), near a major transportation hub (30th St
Station), w/ a neighboring University (UPenn) a few blocks away, that sees a
lot of foot traffic. I’d like to highly recommend you remember to
Hello All-
We are going down the Eduroam path and most of the information available
for configuration is pretty comprehensive.Two Questions- We are planning
our radius server as Debian 7 Wheezy with FreeRadius. Are their any
gotcha's that anyone can share? Also, is there anyone using this
Agreed- you either totally surrender the space to an unsupported (as in ZERO
support) network circus paradigm, or you manage it. There is no practical and
realistic in-between.
Lee Badman | Network Architect (CWNA, CWSP, Mobility+)
Information Technology Services
206 Machinery Hall
120 Smith
You can put me squarely in the "hell no!" camp on this one. We already have
enough problems as it is with printers camping on channel 7, and devices where
the off button just hides the SSID while still keeping the radio powered up
and operating. I can only imagine the fun and games that would
> On 10 Mar 2016, at 22:36, Curtis K. Larsen wrote:
>
> About a year and a half ago I did pretty exhaustive testing of RADIUS load
> with the Spirent
> traffic generator and with the assistance of PacketFence developers.
> (PacketFence is also based
> on
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