Hi all,
We were hit in a very bad way by this bug last year and had it fixed in our
engineering release that we're running now. This bug delayed our migration to
the 8540s by several months.
I am a little surprised that it's taken this long, given we first discovered
this bug early last
I’m pretty happy running the HP Elitebook X360. Enough grunt for the survey’s
we do, PC or tablet mode. Light, battery good enough for most operations.. I
don’t have a sidekick yet so just 2 USB ports is the only real pain point but
I’ve never had a laptop with 4 USB’s anyway.
Use a
Ian,
I could be misremembering, but I believe, at least on the 2800/3800, that the
OS is based on Meraki's with the additional cisco pieces such as CAPWAP
added-in. Also, the engineering team members I've worked with for the product
are located in San Jose.
I do agree that there were growing
OK then.
-Original Message-
From: The EDUCAUSE Wireless Issues Constituent Group Listserv
On Behalf Of Jeffrey D. Sessler
Sent: Thursday, August 23, 2018 10:32 AM
To: WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU
Subject: Re: [WIRELESS-LAN] Cisco - Field Notice - 70253 - Wireless Client
Fails to
Here is my counter to your statement Lee:
Until I joined my neighborhood Nextdoor app, I had no idea that people were
getting their mail stolen, animals taken by coyotes and mountain lions,
unlocked cars ransacked, and so on. As I studied this, I realized that I was
now seeing a small number
On 23 Aug 2018, at 15:48, Jeffrey D. Sessler wrote:
It’s great to hear Aruba is adding features such as “automated RF
management” that Cisco has had for over a decade.
My understanding of the “automated RF management” part is directly
related to the upgrade process (and not DCA/TPC, as you’re
Good point Lee
My experience through the painful upgrade/failure was that Cisco doesn’t know
the pain point. They kept saying, point blank, we were the only people having
issues.I immediately whipped out my laptop and showed them that others were
having issues. The blinking and
It’s great to hear Aruba is adding features such as “automated RF management”
that Cisco has had for over a decade. In another ten years maybe they’ll catch
up to Cisco’s CleanAir technology? :D
In all seriousness,. if you’re talking specifically about AP updates, cisco has
had AP code
One thing that Cisco has in its favor (my theory): most struggling customers
don't know the scale of the code problems because they don't really talk to
other customers. This list aggregates the pain and lays it bare for all to see,
and it's very concerning. I'd love to see AireOS scrapped,
As a result of the lack of QA, we removed all 1000 of our Cisco AP's and moved
to Aruba. Since then, we have had zero problems.
Cisco really needs to get their stuff together, their Wireless has not been an
Enterprise level product, in my opinion.
Ian
-Original Message-
From: The
We were hit with the AID bug around this time last year on an 8.3 release. At
the time the bug was a Sev 2 with Cisco. They provided an engineering release
which we ran until the issue was finally resolved in later code. More proof
that QA in large environments is lacking, to say the least.
Correct - I run on ESS natively on my macbook pro with sidekick. USB
wireless survey will not work with OSX.
Right now, my macbook pro is kind of heavy and am looking for light all in
one laptop or surface pro.
On Thu, Aug 23, 2018 at 7:50 AM, Joachim Tingvold
wrote:
> On 23 Aug 2018, at
On 23 Aug 2018, at 12:59, Lee H Badman wrote:
I’m frequently an Apple skeptic but love the dual-boot Mac paradigm.
Run Ekahau on Windows side, native packet capture etc on OS X side.
You can run ESS natively on OS X nowadays, so theres that.
--
Joachim
**
Participation and
Come over to the Intelligent Wi-Fi side! :D
We just moved to Aruba 8.2.x this summer and are impressed with the automated
RF management capabilities. We can now upgrade all or part of our wireless
network with zero downtime.
We also are in the process from moving from 3 independent systems
I’m frequently an Apple skeptic but love the dual-boot Mac paradigm. Run Ekahau
on Windows side, native packet capture etc on OS X side.
Lee Badman | Network Architect | CWNE #200
Information Technology Services
206 Machinery Hall
120 Smith Drive
Syracuse, New York 13244
t 315.443.3003 f
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