To Surf or Not To Surf. That Is The Question. - Devin Akin
Guest Blog by Devin Akin of Aerohive Networks - In this post, Devin, with the help of several CWNE reviewers and contributors, discusses the various considerations to be made when implementing 802.11ac in enterprise networks. Continue reading...
A Tale of Two Wi-Fis - A Guest Blog by Devin Akin
Often I (Devin) get the question, “Can two Wi-Fi systems be co-located beside each other peacefully?” Absolutely. This may be the case when performing a Wi-Fi system upgrade, vendor changeover, or well…you just happen to think that having different Wi-Fi vendors play different roles in your Wi-Fi network is cool. Whatever your reason, there are some specific items to be aware of when it comes to installing two disparate Wi-Fi systems side-by-side. Continue reading...
The WiSE Article Series: Interference from Non-WiFi Sources, Part 2
In this second part, we continue the discussion on non-Wi-Fi interference sources. We consider three further types of non-Wi-Fi devices: digital video cameras, ZigBee (IEEE 802.15.4), and jammers. The figure below places these devices on the two-dimensional view introduced in the previous article; the previous three devices are also included for comparison and completeness.
Continue reading...The WiSE Article Series: Interference from Non-WiFi Sources, Part 1
In this fifth installment of the WiSE article series from AirTight Networks, you will learn about non-WiFi interference issues and causes. This is part 1 on this topic.
Continue reading...The WiSE Article Series: Wi-Fi Subtleties Explained (Quality of Service [QoS] Controls)
In this fourth installment of the WiSE article series from AirTight Networks, you will learn about some controls that matter in QoS implementations along the Wi-Fi data path.
Continue reading...CWTS - What Changed? - Webinar
CWTS What Changed? webinar slides available for download. Continue reading...
The WiSE Article Series: Wi-Fi Subtleties Explained (Channel Bonding)
In this third installment of the WiSE article series from AirTight Networks, channel bonding is considered. Some surprising results will cause you to rethink your network design plans and possibly how you will implement newer 802.11 technologies.
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