This is what the letter said regarding fees:
“eduroam Invoices and Fees
Internet2 will continue its current practice of covering the eduroam fees as a
benefit for its higher education members. Just for your information, the fee
structure for non-Internet2 members (and Internet2 members that are
All,
Trying to clarify here ...
The eduroam annual fee is included in the Internet2 membership, for members.
Non-members are charged a fee of 10 cents per student (IPEDS data) with a
minimum of $400. The one time fee is only applied if you request
a change to the contract (which is being review
The recurring service fee is $.10 per enrollment according to IPEDS with a
minimum fee of $400 paid annually.
Agreements must be signed by 7/31/2017 in order to ensure no discontinuation of
services.
Unless I'm reading the communication incorrectly, that is the summary I
concluded from it.
T
T.J.,
I am a tremendous advocate and proponent for Eduroam as a common good service
that our campuses should adopt wherever possible.
At the most tactical/self-interested side, in most of our cases, we have
significant numbers of study abroad students as well as faculty who are doing
sabbatica
My understanding is that there are no recurring fees for Internet2
members, just a one-time registration fee.
On Wed, Apr 05, 2017 at 09:21:08PM +, McClintic, Thomas wrote:
> Good Afternoon,
>
> We have not yet implemented EDUROAM, but began looking into it as it was part
> of our Internet2
Good Afternoon,
We have not yet implemented EDUROAM, but began looking into it as it was part
of our Internet2 subscription. It now appears that they have changed the
service to have an annual fee, plus price per enrolled student.
Our feelings are that implementing now with an added fee does no
Hey Bruce,
AP315's, not AP135's.
The building construction is steel-frame, concrete (4") on metal deck, brick
façade with drywall interior. Low-E glass, so I hopefully won't see signals
from the houses that are 40' from the structure.
So here is the concern that I didn't really voice - I know
I didn’t want to put it in the original email, because I was curious what
people would say, but my target is -60ish for handhelds. This is new
construction, so it’s all predictive at this time. My larger concern was that
whole “they can see each other” problem in the cube farm area. The build
I echo Lee’s comment.
There is no magic rule here. If WiFi is the secondary (non-production) network,
then a few ap’s may be enough. If it’s your primary network and your users will
be moving a lot of big data, you’ll likely need a more. Cube spaces are
particularly troublesome since ceiling mo
Is there a link to the app?
Todd Smith
Charleston Area Medical Center
From: The EDUCAUSE Wireless Issues Constituent Group Listserv
[mailto:WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU] On Behalf Of Ian Lyons
Sent: Wednesday, April 05, 2017 08:45
To: WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU
Subject: Re: [WIRELE
As Bruce mentioned, use the freebie app from Airwave and it works well. Plug
in the floor plan that the architect gave you and it should be pretty dang
close.
Ian
From: The EDUCAUSE Wireless Issues Constituent Group Listserv
[mailto:WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU] On Behalf Of Osborne, Br
Brian,
I know the best advice is to survey, but I know for new construction projects
that is not possible. We used to use the VisualRF component of Airwave. We now
use Ekahau to simulate and plan out deployments. It is always good to survey
and adjust afterwards to verify your planning.
I assu
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