discovery packets from the
device with the random MAC. After disabling the feature and rebooting the
device was able to reconnect. This came in late on Friday and I didn't want to
tie up the student so I didn't do anymore digging on the device.
____
Heath Barnha
So does anyone know if this was a feature at launch?
Heath Barnhart, CCNA
ITS Network Administrator
Washburn University
785-670-2307
From: The EDUCAUSE Wireless Issues Constituent Group Listserv
on behalf of Jake Snyder
Sent
p with anything.
____
Heath Barnhart, CCNA
ITS Network Administrator
Washburn University
785-670-2307
**
Participation and subscription information for this EDUCAUSE Constituent Group
discussion list can be found at http://www.educause.edu/groups/.
I'll second that. We are a Ruckus shop too. I had it on last semester and
noticed IOS devices would connect but not get an IP address. Our sales engineer
was surprised it didn't work, and I've been too busy to open a support case on
it.
____
Heath Bar
that point I could see this a great feature for home users. So and so is
coming over, give them access and remove it when they leave. Could even be a
simple check box in your contact list.
--
Heath Barnhart
ITS Network Administrator
Washburn University
Topeka, KS
On Tue, 2015-06-23 at 1
We use a Sonicwall E8500 for NAT, it will log all NAT translations and
send them as syslog to a server for storage. I have logrotate changing
files every hour to make it easier to search on.
--
Heath Barnhart
ITS Network Administrator
Washburn University
Topeka, KS
On Wed, 2015-01-14 at 14:49
I think this would have all the same problems as discussed in the disabling
WiFi access for particular classrooms thread from a couple years ago (sorry to
bring that up).
--
Heath Barnhart
ITS Network Administrator
Washburn University
785-670-2307
On Mon, 2014-11-24 at 06:16 -0500, Joe
We evaluated them a couple years ago during an RFP. I found that they worked
fairly well overall, but I believe there was some concerns about how they would
work with our registration system. I believe they were in the final running but
we went with another vendor.
--
Heath Barnhart
ITS
Same here. The only damage to AP has been water damage for A/C lines.
--
Heath Barnhart
ITS Network Administrator
Washburn University
785-670-2307
On Wed, 2014-10-22 at 18:13 +, Peter P Morrissey wrote:
FWIW, on the enclosures, we've had thousands of AP's for close to a decad
were the student wants to work so that's were the best
signal should be.
--
Heath Barnhart
ITS Network Administrator
Washburn University
785-670-2307
On Tue, 2014-10-21 at 14:25 -0400, Philippe Hanset wrote:
From my previous experience at University of Tennessee, Knoxville where I
r
nt worker), and have a polite conversation
with the offender. I haven't had a problem with this method, though I've never
been faced with 700 rogues. What types of devices are being classified as
rogues?
--
Heath Barnhart
ITS Network Administrator
Washburn University
785-670-2307
I believe it was mostly to discourage our residential neighbors from using us
for free Internet rather than getting their own ISP. I think CALEA compliance
might've been part of it as well. We do have a method for providing longer
access if required.
--
Heath Barnhart
ITS Ne
x27;t throttle the
bandwidth.
--
Heath Barnhart
ITS Network Administrator
Washburn University
785-670-2307
On Tue, 2014-09-09 at 15:40 +, Mark Reboli wrote:
I am looking for information on what people do with guest wireless. Do you
have open wireless on your campus? Do you have a password
I'm using a simple ACL to restrict traffic. For VPN access we are allowing SSL
and some well know ports used by many VPNs. My supervisor said he got the list
from somewhere on Educause, though I never saw the actual documentation.
--
Heath Barnhart
ITS Network Administrator
Washburn Unive
exclusion
period, and we limit what services can be used to basic stuff like HTTP, HTTPS,
FTP, SSH, and VPN.
--
Heath Barnhart
ITS Network Administrator
Washburn University
785-670-2307
On Thu, 2014-05-15 at 12:52 -0400, Chuck Anderson wrote:
Has anyone had to deal with administration
I think I had 1 failure (not DoA) out of 116 APs, and I've installed another 90
without issue. I didn't really worry about, they got a new one out to me pretty
quick. IMO, if I wouldn't worry unless there are more failures. Then I'd start
asking the vendor about defects.
27;ve had since fall of 2012 were all client
configuration issues (yay Vista!).
--
Heath Barnhart
ITS Network Administrator
Washburn University
785-670-2307
On Wed, 2013-12-11 at 16:27 -0500, Barros, Jacob wrote:
We are going into dorm rooms over winter break to review ap placement. Do an
or the few locations I've needed them, though it would cost to much
more to spray paint them the necessary color. Plus they are several
times cheaper than what the vendors are pointing me to.
--
Heath Barnhart, CCNA
ITS Network Administrator
Washburn University
785-670-2307
-Original Me
I'd ask for some proof (nicely). If needed, you can get some spectrum
analysis software to see what's actually happening in the RF space in
their labs. Ultimately I'd leave it up to the occupants of the building
to decide whether they want WiFi or not (and get the decision in wr
We are doing #1. Most of our buildings are far enough apart that you
can't roam, so that's not an issue. Authentications run through the same
radius server with policies for each vendor. I see the merit of option 3
though.
Heath Barnhart, CCNA
ITS Network Administrator
Washburn
for growth.
Heath Barnhart, CCNA
ITS Network Administrator
Washburn University
Topeka, KS
On 02/24/2013 08:05 PM, Joel Coehoorn wrote:
Don't think in terms of "clients per AP". Think in terms of clients per radio,
as some access points have more than one radio. At this point
two groups, but as I recall
different condition types are evaluated with an AND, so in theory you
could do it that way. I'm interested in this as well, but haven't had
time to play with it.
Heath Barnhart, CCNA
ITS Network Administrator
Washburn University
Topeka, KS
On 02/06/201
controller, it
wouldn't surprise me that the problem is in their code somewhere.
Heath Barnhart, CCNA
ITS Network Administrator
Washburn University
Topeka, KS
On 01/24/2013 12:01 PM, Peter Murphy wrote:
Jake,
Your contact is correct in stating that using TKIP instead of AES
will use le
.
I believe the newer HT WiFi technologies are focused on 5 GHz, so I
wouldn't be surprised to see more device 5 GHz capability in the near
future.
Heath Barnhart, CCNA
ITS Network Administrator
Washburn University
Topeka, KS
On 01/11/2013 08:50 AM, Tom O'Donnell wrote:
I was wonde
.educause.edu/groups/.
--
*Heath Barnhart, CCNA*
Network Administrator
Information Technology Services
Washburn University
Topeka, KS
**
Participation and subscription information for this EDUCAUSE Constituent Group
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discussion list can be found at
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**
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and station to station traffic at the same time.
--
*Heath Barnhart, CCNA*
Network Administrator
Information Systems Services
Washburn University
Topeka, KS
On 2/22/2012 10:09 AM, Mike Goebel wrote:
Has anyone actually tracked how much bandwidth/usage Bonjour coughs up
across their wlan in
information for this EDUCAUSE Constituent Group
discussion list can be found at http://www.educause.edu/groups/.
--
*Heath Barnhart, CCNA*
Network Administrator
Information Systems Services
Washburn University
Topeka, KS
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en a wired user consume a high percentage
bandwidth. I'm looking at pushing for some wireless upgrades in the
coming years, but I myself can't really see a good reason to wait for
the new HT technologies.
--
*Heath Barnhart, CCNA*
Network Administrator
Information Systems Services
Wash
I agree with Joel, 80-100 users per AP is a bit much on an AP. What's
the ratio of 2.4 GHz to 5 GHz? I'm not familiar with the 1240 (have a
couple but none of them work), do they have any smartRF built in (can
they "nudge" dual band clients to 5 GHz)?
--
Heath Barnha
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--
ave clause similar to that).
We are in the same boat policy wise, and we require interfering device
to be removed. I've only got one or two actual rogue APs at the moment,
the rest are Ad-Hocs.
--
----
Heath Barnhart, C
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--
--------
Heath Barnhart, CCNA
Information Systems Services
Washbu
Participation and subscription information for this EDUCAUSE
Constituent Group discussion list can be found at
http://www.educause.edu/groups/.
--
Heath Barnhart, CCNA
Information Systems Services
Washburn Uni
information for this
EDUCAUSE Constituent Group discussion list can be found at
http://www.educause.edu/groups/.
--
--------
Heath Barnhart, CCNA
Information Systems Services
Washburn Univeristy
Topeka, KS 66621
**
for this EDUCAUSE Constituent Group
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EDUCAUSE Constituent Group discussion list can be found at
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roups/.
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Heath Barnhart, CCNA
Information Systems Services
Washburn Univeristy
Topeka, KS 66621
**
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You could also no broadcast the SSIDs, but this could cause problems
depending on the client devices and has fallen out of favor as control
mechanism.
Heath Barnhart
Asst. Sys/Net Administrator
Informations Systems and Services
Washburn University
- Original Message -
From: Jason Appah
this, but it
was with trains in Europe or Asia. I'll see if I can find it. For
something more local, what about WiMAX?
Heath Barnhart
Asst. Sys/Net Administrator
Information Systems Services
Washburn Univerity
Topeka, KS
- Original Message -
From: Lee H Badman <[EMAIL PRO
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