Feb 13

AirWaves Podcast with Manatee Schools [20:42m]:
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In this latest installment of AirWaves, I spoke with Ron Jones who is one of the Network Systems Managers for Manatee County School District, one of the largest in the country with over 49,000 students and 7,000 employees.
Like most school districts, the wireless network at Manatee has grown over time. Manatee CSD now has about 2,000 wireless access points from Cisco and ProCurve by HP and serves up wireless access to just about every campus in the district.
As you can imagine, Ron has his hands full and has found ways to use his AirWave Management Platform to streamline many of the manual processes.
Written by
Bryan Wargo
Tags:
AMP •
Bryan Wargo •
Cisco •
HP ProCurve •
K-12 Education •
wireless •
wireless management
Feb 13
Managed Service Providers (or MSP’s) have been participating in a pretty high growth business environment over the last few years. These organizations range from the major Telcos (Verizon and AT&T) to major hardware vendors (IBM and HP) to major System Integrators (CSC and Accenture) to regional niche players. It seems that just about anyone who is involved in IT wants to join the lucrative business of outsourcing or co-sourcing their customers networks and environments.
As WLANs become more prevalent and mission critical, this new area of networking is drawing the attention of many of these players. A year and a half ago, Verizon Business was one of the first to jump in a public way into this arena. It makes sense with Verizon’s history of wireless, networking, and now outsourcing, that they would be a leader in WLAN management. But Verizon Business is not alone in this field. Just about every MSP that offers network management is preparing to also offer WLAN management.
As these organizations enter into the WLAN management arena there are a few pitfalls they need to be aware of:
1. WLANs need to be managed differently the LANs. Due to the inherent nature of wireless, these devices need to be monitored in very different ways than their router and switch brethren. MSPs who make the mistake of just offering simple “up/down” status will not be doing their customer any favors - it is critical to provide RF management and optimization to ensure that not only are devices up, but that the network is actually working.
2. WLAN management needs to be integrated with LAN management. I think MSPs grasp this one pretty quickly - from a purely cost perspective. If the MSP has to build out a parallel infrastructure just for WLAN management then it will take them a long time to make a profit. By integrating WLAN specific tools into their existing operational infrastructure they can gain leverage and re-use many of the skill sets and processes that they have in house.
3. WLAN is just the beginning. Any MSP who starts discussing with their customer about managing their WLAN needs to understand that its not just the APs and/or controllers that need to be managed…it’s all the rest of the network as well. This includes the authentication infrastructure, the wired network that the wireless devices connect to, power, firewalls, etc. This is a great opportunity for the MSP to showcase all of their wares but they have to have this mindset from the beginning.
MSPs have a great opportunity in the WLAN space and can provide a fantastic service to their clients. As this market matures this level of service is going to become more and more important.
Written by
Bryan Wargo
Tags:
managed service provider •
MSP •
telco •
wireless •
WLAN
Dec 19

AirWave Podcast with Denver International Airport:
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There has been a lot of press recently around Denver International Airport moving from a “paid” wifi service to a “free” service. I had the opportunity to speak with Mikael Rasmussen who is the WiFi Manager for Qwest Government Services and has the actual responsibility for running and maintaining all of the wireless LAN services at DIA. The free network is getting most of the publicity today but Mikael also has the responsibility for other wireless LAN services that the airlines and the airport use for things like baggage handling and security. Mikael inherited the AirWave Wireless Management Suite when Qwest took over responsibility for the network but has quickly become a convert as he’s had to deal with legacy networks and multiple vendors. Take a listen and feel free to post questions on our forum.
Written by
Bryan Wargo
Tags:
802.11n •
Cisco •
Denver •
denver international airport •
DIA •
free WiFi •
Meru •
muni Wifi •
Qwest •
WiFi •
wireless •
WLAN
Dec 17
AirWave, Podcast
by
Bryan Wargo

Ivy Plus League WiFi Panel:
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This week we recorded a podcast with the main wireless LAN guys from MIT, Brown and Princeton…hence the Ivy+ League moniker. Chris, Don, and Daniel offer candid insights into how they are managing their campus wide WLAN deployments, where their networks are headed and how they are dealing with new technologies like 802.11 and the iPhone. These guys have been cumulatively running wireless networks for over 10 years and they have all seen the impact of different radio technologies, wireless LAN architectures, and physical deployment scenarios. If you are managing your own wireless LAN or would like to learn from people who are managing hundreds of wireless nodes and supporting thousands of wireless clients, please take a listen.
Written by
Bryan Wargo
Tags:
802.11 •
access point •
Brown •
case study •
client •
controller •
Higher Education •
iPhone •
MIT •
networks •
panel •
Princeton •
University •
WiFi •
wireless •
WLAN
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