Three, maybe four seconds to load the initial screen and then two maybe three 
seconds to login. As I doubt a screen capture will work when I'm RDPed in, I'll 
record the entire login process when I get home and post it up on YouTube. 




----- 
Mike Hammett 
Intelligent Computing Solutions 
http://www.ics-il.com 

----- Original Message -----

From: "Josh Luthman" <[email protected]> 
To: [email protected] 
Sent: Tuesday, January 20, 2015 12:26:09 PM 
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] EPMP Minimum System Specs <rant> 


Login takes forever. The first like 10-15 seconds just load and load and load. 
Once you're in, it's acceptable in terms of page rendering. 






Josh Luthman 
Office: 937-552-2340 
Direct: 937-552-2343 
1100 Wayne St 
Suite 1337 
Troy, OH 45373 

On Tue, Jan 20, 2015 at 1:22 PM, Sean Heskett < [email protected] > wrote: 



we use macbook pro's and the ePMP GUI has never been slow for us. It was UGLY, 
but they fixed that with version 2.0 haha. 


not sure why everyone says it's slow tho because we've never seen it. 


2 cents 


-sean 








On Tue, Jan 20, 2015 at 9:57 AM, Nate Burke < [email protected] > wrote: 

<blockquote>
Ok, Cambium, this is a little sad. My Field Laptop, a Lenovo S10-3t, Atom 
Processor with Windows 8.1 cannot load the EPMP WEB Pages in a timely manner. 
We're talking 40-60 seconds for initial load, and 20-30 seconds per screen 
refresh/menu change. Since I'm going to have to go to the boss, and tell him 
that I need a new laptop to do any field troubleshooting for these new radios, 
what are the minimum system specs for a machine to view the EPMP Screens? 
Unless Cambium is going to get their Web interface under control as of 
Yesterday. 

They still swear that the GUI was all developed in house and not purchased 
(something I still can't believe). I'd like to know who the engineers/managers 
are who signed off on that design. I can only imaging that there was a group of 
guys sitting around the conference table, watching the presentation on the GUI 
on the projector up front, all nodding their heads in agreement, "I think this 
is a wonderful layout, the field tech's won't mind waiting a couple extra 
minutes for the pages to load so they can look this pretty!!" 

I think that Cambium should step up and get engineers from ALL aspects of 
product development out into the field. 40 seconds waiting for the page to load 
is fine when you're sitting in the office, but not when you have the laptop 
balanced on a stack of firewood in the freezing rain trying to get to the 
monitoring page to see why a radio isn't linking up. I think that every WISP on 
this list would be more than happy to host an engineer for a day. Heck, even if 
they go into the parking lot and assemble it on the tailgate of someone's 
Pickup, they'll get some idea of what we experience. 

I have a feeling that if all steps of the Dev process took a week in the field, 
We'd have a radio that had a GUI that responded instantly on any device, and 
radios that assembled and mounted (and unmounted) with 1 gloved hand. 

</rant> 
Nate 




</blockquote>


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