College to Deploy First 802.11n Network 90
Matt writes "Morrisville State College, a New York State school in central New York, is partnering with Meru Networks and IBM to deploy the first 802.11n wireless network. They will be using around 900 access points and are planning to go live this fall."
Unproven like the early Internet was? (Score:2)
hello (Score:2, Funny)
Anyway, first post. Yo.
The second poster is gay btw.
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54mbps? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:54mbps? (Score:5, Insightful)
Shared between whoever's within range of a particular access point in a school, 54Mb/s doesn't seem all that much.
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They most definitely did not do a good job in deploying the first gen wireless 802.11a wireless network that they had. They did a deployment of wireless for all dorms instead of running cat5. Exactly why is beyond me. Cat5 would have been a heck of a lot cheaper since now they are replacing the entire wireless system.
Each dorm was four floors, two wings (one male one female). Two access points per
remember 33k? (Score:1)
Paradoxically though, while I am still in awe of such high speeds, I also whine when my 10mbit interwebs connection is taking too long to transfer the multi gigabyte result sets I have to chuck about between machines.
Re:remember 33k? (Score:4, Informative)
1.25 megabytes. Remember that a generic S-ATA or IDE hard disk writes at about 5-6MB/s and that can be a big bottlencek most of the time. So the 54Mbps connection you speak of is a total speed of ~7MB/s. That's not the internet speed. That's the LAN connection. So one person tries to send a large file to another on the network and all of a sudden we've hit that bottleneck and no one can even check their email.
Although some of these numbers sound impressive realistically for daily LAN usage they are just about usable.
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a good modern disk should perform linear reads/writes at around the 55-60MB/s mark.
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The modem's encoding a byte with 10 bits would be at layer 1.
Over that, you'd have Ethernet, with its own overhead (the 14+4 bytes you mentioned), PPP, etc, at layer 2.
Over that, you have IP, with a 20 byte header, layer 3
And over that, you have TCP, with a 32 byte header, layer 4.
Not to mention that those 1500 byte packets are only 1500 bytes when transferring large amounts of data. Something with small packets like SSH gets more overhead.
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Nope, hard disk speeds are quoted in MB/sec, not Mbps. You're a factor of 8 out - 40-50MB/sec is more like it (and modern desktop drives are a bit faster than that).
Not necessarily... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Not necessarily... (Score:5, Informative)
The actual transfer rate is reduced from the optimum by the packetising of the data, obtaining the wireless spectrum before transmission and that an inter-packet gap is inserted between every transmitted packet to allow other AP users to transmit data.
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You must also remember too 802.11 is a half duplex protocol, so this further reduces practical (real world) speeds.
Re:Not necessarily... (Score:5, Informative)
Under
One thing to keep in mind in all of this is that in many cases, the uplink on a switch to the rest of the network is only 100Mbps, so the final throughput from what people are used to isn't going to decrease all that much. Factor in several APs with a balanced channel setup with a gigabit uplink, and the experience shouldn't be all that different from what the wired people are experiencing.
Greater throughput allows more clients (Score:3, Insightful)
e.g. Imagine taking one of those electronic paper book things out to the football field and showing the players a video of a play, with animated diagrams.
Then the engi
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So. What. The point of the parent is this: I have fast internet at home, at (claimed) 8mbps. That is the bottleneck, not the wi-fi from the wall to the pc at 20+ mbps. Increasing the wi-fi speed will make no difference at all to the speed that I can download stuff.
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When your dealing with a school you need good range.
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Last year I bought Belkin's 802.11preN AP and PC card and did some tests of my own. With the AP in my house I was able to get usable signal up to 400 ft away with clear LoS (to my house) and about 100 ft away through the neighbors houses.
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54mbps isn't fast enough? I mean its not like your going to be accessing the internet with anything close to that.
For a university? My university has a 10GB/s connection[1] to the outside world. I can often get 3-4MB/s transfers with the GigE connection that goes to my desk. Over 801.11g, I can't get more than about 1.5MB/s in real world usage. Note also that bandwidth on a WiFi network is shared, so this 1.5MB/s only happens when no one else is using it, while the wired network is switched and so the contention is spread over the campus.
[1] Well, it did a couple of years ago, last time I checked. They might ha
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802.11n is not a finished product, in a smaller uni like this one it might be OK but whe
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They came from 2 mbit (Score:5, Informative)
They have nearly filled the alphabet btw. Only 802.11z is still free as a name. Can you name them all ? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/802.11n#Standard_and
I do wonder what's still wrong with 802.16 (Score:2)
Re:They came from 2 mbit (Score:4, Funny)
This just begs the obvious answer:
802.11a, 802.11b, 802.11c, 802.11d, 802.11e...
Re:They came from 2 mbit (Score:5, Funny)
Sobriety Test (Score:2)
Inebriated Driver: Yeah, just give me a ticket.
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Don't worry, we're just getting started on the Unicode space.
After 802.11z comes 802.11aa (Score:1)
It's really just a base-26 numbering system that can't use numbers since they're already used in the 802.11 part.
Whoa (Score:2, Funny)
**AA (Score:5, Funny)
I doubt this is the first 802.11network... (Score:2, Insightful)
I know it's early but c'mon.
Exactly-it isn't the first 801.11n! (Score:1, Informative)
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802.11n hasn't been ratified yet, there's no such thing as an 802.11n network at the moment.
Currently expected in september 2008
http://grouper.ieee.org/groups/802/11/Reports/802
It will be a while before someone rolls out the first 802.11n network.
TTB
Pioneers? Sure, but.... (Score:5, Insightful)
1. The school likes being known as a 'tech pioneer.'
2. The product needed a landmark event from an understanding, capable customer;
3. The price _must_ have been perfect;
4. The school was really ready for an upgrade and the timing was exactly right to make 802.11g obsolete upon order.
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SUNY Morrisville did have one of the first wireless campuses in the state. They also gave out free (although horribly admin-locked) laptops to students. I think that their small size may help them in adopting the latest technologies. Plus they do try to shake the image they have of being an equestrian college in a farm town.
I never went to SUNY Morrisville myself, but had a couple friends from
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No, Not free. There was a $600 a semester line item on my bill over 4 semesters. Students are buying a laptop for $2400. Oh, and if you drop out after the third semester, you had to pay the last $600 or give it back. The school doesn't pay anything for the laptops. The cost goes right to the tuition.
On the otherhand, in fall 2002 when I was issued my Thinkpad T-30, there was no more powerful laptop on the market, and $2400 was slig
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They also gave out free (although horribly admin-locked) laptops to students.
I don't know about you guys, but i had mine unlocked after the first week after I asked a buddy at the helpdesk for the bios password. I had linux up and going even before I had the bios password. Those things weren't as locked down as they appeared to be.
Since I lacked pci wireless cards I used my now linux lappy as a router for the rest of the computers in my room. That worked out quite well. And if you really needed to get into the bios, you used the control panel irq config to set all the irq's on
In later news (Score:2, Funny)
More about SUNY Morrisville (Score:2, Informative)
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Someone above noted that the school has prided themselves on being near the cutting edge, technologically speaking. They're right.
One of the memories that I have was of the technology they chose to "broadcast" the school radio station around the campus. You wouldn't hear it at all unless you wrapped an electric chord (say, from a lamp) around your radio. Very unusual. Effective, but unusual.
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Meru just works (Score:2, Interesting)
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who have deployed Meru goes something like this:
Them: I love Meru
Me: So it's working really well?
Them: Well, no, we have a lot of problems.
Me: So...
Them: Yeah, but I really love Meru. Highly recommend it.
I see this stuff on the Educause mailing lists all the time. It confuses me.
802.11n hangs AP? (Score:1, Offtopic)
I know this isn't ask slashdot or tech support but it's at least related to the subject. I have a new Macbook Pro with N wireless. Our local town has a small wireless LAN used for emergency services. In our last drill I brought my mbp with me but every time I fired up my wireless I would hang the Linksys WRT54G access point. I'm going to try and get them to flash their AP with newer Linksys firmware but they are reluctant to do this.
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Now, I really haven
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First 802.11n network? (Score:4, Funny)
The first 802.11n network?
I have one in my house.
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About Freaking Time (Score:5, Interesting)
Additionally they removed all the copper Ethernet from the dorms so using the Internet from the dorms was horrible. There really was not enough bandwidth to go around, and lots of concrete and metal furniture didn't help either. This was also at the time when p2p was really taking off and the network had never been built to expect that kind of traffic. To further mess things up, they removed all the pots telephone lines from the dorms and issued every student a cell phone. They got into a deal with Nextel that put a tower on campus, and created their own mini-cell network. Seemed like a good idea until everyone discovered push-to-talk. There were more phone's chirping than birds. And if you think Cell phones in the movies are bad, cell phones in the classroom are worse.
So anyway while it may seem like they are blazing forward, this is really just a much needed upgrade from an earlier deployment. Most of the students wanted these kinds of upgrades while I was still there. Really all they needed was more access points in the dorms, but I understand that there are only so many can be crammed together before they run all over each other.
It may sound like a rant against the school, but I really enjoyed my time there, Mainly because I commuted from (sorta) nearby Syracuse.
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So how long ..... (Score:1, Flamebait)
802.11n draft for live? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:802.11n draft for live? (Score:4, Informative)
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central New York!? (Score:1)
So what about the .. (Score:2)
BTW what is the advantage over G? Still 2.4ghz?
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First ever? I think not. (Score:1)
For what purpose? (Score:1)