To your point, Justin- in my mind I still don't feel that Cisco has done a good 
job of providing clarity about the topic of wall-mounting. Sometimes that's all 
you can do, and the world doesn't come crashing to a halt. Would be nice to see 
them change their tune on this.
________________________________________
From: The EDUCAUSE Wireless Issues Constituent Group Listserv 
[wireless-...@listserv.educause.edu] On Behalf Of Hao, Justin C 
[j...@austin.utexas.edu]
Sent: Sunday, April 11, 2010 8:19 PM
To: WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU
Subject: Re: [WIRELESS-LAN] Aruba vs HP vs Meraki

In the same line of examination you want to pay attention to ap
performance and features. Cisco's 1142 does not have orientable
antennas and does not support wall mount(vertical) placement.  Also
note the 2x3 mimo vs the 3x3 mimo between Cisco and Aruba.  Cisco's
only current option for wall mount 802.11n w/ discrete antennas is the
monster 1250.  The 1142 is also significantly larger than the AP125.

So consider your installation environment and mounting options when
selecting your Vendor.

---
Justin Hao
j...@austin.utexas.edu
University of Texas
ITS - Networking

On Apr 11, 2010, at 5:32 PM, "Jeffrey Sessler"
<j...@scrippscollege.edu> wrote:

> Ethan,
>
> Where I would suggest spending some evaluation time is on the AP
> construction. Having had time to evaluate both the Aruba and Cisco
> AP's,
> there were doubts as to the Aruba's life-span when placed in our
> residential halls. The design (this was their 802.11n product), relied
> on venting and convection cooling, and it was unknown what would
> happen
> as dust-bunnies and other obstructions settled on those vents. Even in
> our "lab" the Aruba AP got hot, so much so that the metal shield on
> the
> ethernet connector was uncomfortable to the touch. The Cisco AP's on
> the
> other hand were 100% sealed, stayed cool, and the large aluminum
> casing
> is the heat sink. Between the two, it was felt the Cisco would be
> maintenance free while the Aruba might require attention (dusting off)
> from time to time. Point being, as you look at Aruba, HP, Meru, etc.
> make sure to keep the AP's design and planned deployment locations in
> mind.
>
> Jeff
>
>>>> Ethan Sommer <somm...@gac.edu> 4/2/2010 6:25 PM >>>
> As I said in another post we selected our "finalists" based on what
> others colleges seem happy with (which by a wide margin seems to be
> mostly cisco, aruba, and meru) and HP because we already have a HP
> infrastructure.
>
> My assumption is that all of you are smart and there is a reason you
> all
> chose to go with those products.
>
> We are on a tight budget, so based on initial pricing we eliminated
> Cisco and Meru who seemed to be the most expensive (plus we don't like
>
> cisco for a number of other reasons).
>
> (As an aside, after posting here meru contacted me _and my boss_,
> which
>
> I believe is not allowed under this list's rules. In any case, I told
> them if they could provide a quote for a 200 dual radio complete
> system
>
> in the same ballpark as the other systems we're looking at, then we'll
>
> talk.)
>
> Our next steps are
> * To get quotes
> * And bring in the systems to do test runs in real life conditions.
> (We're going to try each out in one of the dorms and the library, each
>
> of which currently have 10 APs.)
>
> If we aren't in love with any of those systems, we'll widen our
> search.
>
> We have very limited resources, so if one comes in much cheaper than
> the
> others the question will be "is that system good enough for us."
> Otherwise we'll pick the system that we think will work best for us.
>
> Based on talking with schools running Aruba and Meraki, I think either
>
> would be a great move forward for us. I've yet to hear of a school who
>
> chose either and regretted it.
>
> Ethan
>
>
>
> Mike Hydra wrote:
>> What I personally find interesting is the wide choice not from a
>> manufacturing point of view but more from a Wi-Fi technology point of
>
>> view.
>>
>> Aruba – Controller based (aka controller based)
>> All data goes through the controller, centralized architecture.
>>
>> HP – decentralized (Controller in not directly essential)
>> Data path is separated from the management path.
>>
>> Meraki – Cloud computing
>> Centralized Cloud, not having to own controller hardware inside your
>
>> own network.
>>
>> All three very different solutions.
>>
>> I’m looking forward to follow this email threat with the comments,
>
>> thanks for sharing.
>> I would recommend writing down a proof of concept and invite the
>> vendors of your choice.
>> In this way you’ve tested your requirement (out of your proof on
>> concept) therefore convinced around the solution you buy is the right
> one.
>> Good luck...
>>
>>
>> Mike Hydra
>>
>> Cell: +31 6 29 07 18 96
>> Tel: +31 252 62 61 20
>> Fax: +31 252 68 88 37
>> E-mail: mhy...@2fast4wireless.com
>> Skype: Flying-Wireless-Dutchman
>> Web: www.2fast4wireless.com
>>
>>
>>
>>
> ---
> ---------------------------------------------------------------------
>> *From: *Peter P Morrissey <ppmor...@syr.edu>
>> *Reply-To: *The EDUCAUSE Wireless Issues Constituent Group Listserv
>> <WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU>
>> *Date: *Fri, 2 Apr 2010 22:47:26 +0200
>> *To: *<WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU>
>> *Subject: *Re: Aruba vs HP vs Meraki
>>
>> OK, so I'll ask. Why did you eliminate Cisco already?
>> Pete M.
>>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: The EDUCAUSE Wireless Issues Constituent Group Listserv
>> [mailto:wireless-...@listserv.educause.edu] On Behalf Of Ethan
> Sommer
>> Sent: Friday, April 02, 2010 2:21 PM
>> To: WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU
>> Subject: [WIRELESS-LAN] Aruba vs HP vs Meraki
>>
>> We are considering replacing our 200+ AP wireless infrastructure with
> a
>> controller based 802.11n system.
>>
>> I believe we have narrowed it down to Aruba, HP Procurve (we use HP
>> switch gear), and Meraki.
>>
>> I have two questions:
>>
>> 1. Are there any hidden costs we should watch out for with any of
> these
>> (particularly Aruba.) Will we hit major costs other than the up
> front
>> cost for the APs and the controllers?
>>
>> 2. I know a lot of schools are very happily using Aruba, but I
> haven't
>> heard of any schools using HP and very few using Meraki.
>>
>> Are there any schools who have gone with Aruba and regretted it? If
>> so, why?
>>
>> Are there any schools out there using HP Procurve (formerly
> Colubrius)
>> or Merkai? What do you think of them? Did you have any surprises
> after
>> you deployed?
>>
>>
>> Ethan
>>
>> --
>> Ethan Sommer
>> Associate Director of Core Services
>> 507-933-7042
>> somm...@gustavus.edu
>>
>> **********
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>>
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>
>
> --
> Ethan Sommer
> Associate Director of Core Services
> 507-933-7042
> somm...@gustavus.edu
>
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