Yes, that is what Alexandra did, and that is why it is linked to her
account.  If she doesn't have chrome open, logged in to google, then the
share doesn't work.  :(

Jacob

---
Office Nomads - Individuality without Isolation
http://www.officenomads.com -  (206) 323-6500


On Wed, Jun 13, 2012 at 12:43 PM, Matthew Arkin <
[email protected]> wrote:

> Jacob, you should be able to "Share" printers with Google Cloud Print
> http://support.google.com/chromeos/a/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=1329537
>
>
> On Wed, Jun 13, 2012 at 3:37 PM, Jacob Sayles <[email protected]>wrote:
>
>> We have a lot of traffic with 4 apt buildings surrounding us so there are
>> approximately 20-30 competing signals depending on where you sit.  We still
>> have issues if someone is on 802.11g only (2.4ghz) but most users are on
>> the 5ghz band.  The full place is wired though so if anyone has issues, we
>> just tell them to plug in.  When I hear "I'm having wireless issues" I
>> check out their laptop and 9 times out of 10 it's an older machine that
>> only does 802.11g.
>>
>> One piece of hardware I would love to find is a google cloud print
>> server.  Currently anyone needing to print from a chrome book needs
>> Alexandra to be logged in to Chrome and it goes through her account.  This
>> is a horrible solution.  Anyone got a better solution?
>>
>>
>> Jacob
>>
>> ---
>> Office Nomads - Individuality without Isolation
>> http://www.officenomads.com -  (206) 323-6500
>>
>>
>> On Wed, Jun 13, 2012 at 12:24 PM, Alex Hillman <
>> [email protected]> wrote:
>>
>>>  Impressive. How many other wifi access points are within range?
>>>
>>> I have a feeling that our signal to noise ratio was hurting our ability
>>> to run that many devices from even 4 Airport Extremes.
>>>
>>> I guess the lesson here is "your milage may vary" on any of these pieces
>>> of equipment, so don't expect a silver bullet.
>>>
>>> --
>>> /ah
>>> indyhall.org
>>> coworking in philadelphia
>>>
>>> On Wednesday, June 13, 2012 at 3:17 PM, Jacob Sayles wrote:
>>>
>>> Yes, just one Airport Extreme.  At the moment we have 42 devices
>>> connected to the wireless out of 63 in the space... but it's also a quiet
>>> day.  Last Wednesday, our busiest day ever, we had 107 devices in the
>>> space.  I can't see how many of those were on the wifi.  I say "devices"
>>> because most users are at least 2 with their phone and their laptop.  Today
>>> we have 26 members in the space.
>>>
>>> Jacob
>>>
>>> ---
>>> Office Nomads - Individuality without Isolation
>>> http://www.officenomads.com -  (206) 323-6500
>>>
>>>
>>> On Wed, Jun 13, 2012 at 12:09 PM, Alex Hillman <
>>> [email protected]> wrote:
>>>
>>>  Just one Airport Extreme How many people share that AP?
>>>
>>>
>>> --
>>> /ah
>>> indyhall.org
>>> coworking in philadelphia
>>>
>>> On Wednesday, June 13, 2012 at 3:01 PM, Jacob Sayles wrote:
>>>
>>> We run pfsense on an old P3 machine and it works great.  The WAN
>>> fail-over is a little clunky so don't expect seamless transitions.  It
>>> takes about 10 seconds to switch over and all VPNs, file transfers, etc are
>>> dropped.  That said, 10 seconds of outage is better then being down.
>>>  That's why we pay $200/month for a second internet connection.  We balance
>>> it out by having that line (comcast) handle all our phones (4).
>>>
>>> Wifi we are happy with our Airport Extreme.  5000sqft and solid coverage.
>>>
>>> Jacob
>>>
>>> ---
>>> Office Nomads - Individuality without Isolation
>>> http://www.officenomads.com -  (206) 323-6500
>>>
>>>
>>> On Mon, Jun 4, 2012 at 8:59 AM, Alex Hillman <
>>> [email protected]> wrote:
>>>
>>>  I'm working on a complete redux of the evolution of our networking
>>> equipment as we've grown for my blog, I'll share it here when it's done.
>>> Here's a bit of a preview of the latest evolution.
>>>
>>> On the router side of things, we now have a pfSense-based appliance
>>> called a Firebox. pfSense is a very robust piece of router software and can
>>> be run on a variety of appliances that range in price, but we were able to
>>> pick one of the older models (RX6264S) up on EBay for ~$220.
>>>
>>> pfSense itself is free and open source, but specialized hardware can run
>>> it optimally. We looked at new hardware from http://www.hacom.net and
>>> it runs $800-1500.
>>>
>>> It's a LOT more powerful than anything in the consumer arena, handling
>>> 1000's of users and millions of connections. Consumer gear starts to slow
>>> down with anything north of 50 users. It' usable, but you'll start noticing
>>> problems. Also, pfSense gives us REALLY great analytics for finding and
>>> squashing problems, like connections that are flooding the network for all
>>> users and also gives us really useful tools for giving things that need
>>> connection priority (like Skype and SSH connections) over things like
>>> Youtube and torrents.
>>>
>>> For us, that means a much easier to manage "network policy". You can use
>>> just about anything on our network, and the router figures out if it's
>>> causing problems and throttles the amount of network it has access to.
>>>
>>> The hardware we bought also allows for bridged WAN, which means we can
>>> install a fallback ISP for when our primary ISP is having issues, and that
>>> way people don't' ever lose their connection.
>>>
>>> On the wireless side of things, we tested Meraki and Ruckus and went
>>> with Ruckus. Meraki APs seemed to have a shorter range and while the Cloud
>>> Control system was badass, we'd never use 99% of it. The sales people were
>>> really nice and helpful, but it didn't seem like a good fit for us.
>>>
>>> Ruckus, on the other hand, was challenging to work with through their
>>> normal enterprise sales channels so we went to Ebay again and bought a new
>>> AP for 25% off list price and it works awesome. We don't get their
>>> enterprise support, but I'm not too worried about it. I'm very happy with
>>> the performance of a single access point (covering and supporting >100
>>> users on 2 floors) and plan to buy a 2nd AP to beef up the coverage. We're
>>> using the Ruckus 7962 -
>>> http://www.ruckuswireless.com/products/zoneflex-indoor/7962
>>>
>>> Thanks for the recommendation for Ruckus from the Cambridge Innovation
>>> Center crew. I'm a happy customer.
>>>
>>> I also strongly recommend NetSpot (www.netspotapp.com) for doing a site
>>> survey, which I was recommended by Chris Johnson (copied on this email).
>>> It's a free app that lets you do a heat map of signal strength and signal
>>> to noise ratios. It gave me a TON of insight into placement and the
>>> resulting coverage of wifi. Probably the most useful tool I learned about
>>> last month!
>>>
>>> -Alex
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> --
>>> /ah
>>> indyhall.org
>>> coworking in philadelphia
>>>
>>> On Monday, June 4, 2012 at 11:34 AM, Angel Kwiatkowski wrote:
>>>
>>> I lied, we use Netgear routers. They're odd. They needed to be restarted
>>> constantly when we first moved in but now run very smoothly.
>>>
>>> On Sunday, June 3, 2012 8:55:04 PM UTC-6, Angel Kwiatkowski wrote:
>>>
>>>  We use Dlink routers. One in the basement conference room where the
>>> juice line comes in that's hardwired up to the 3rd floor where most of the
>>> coworking happens. Both are activated for wireless. Additionally, I think
>>> the guys ran hard wires all the way upstairs and then hooked up a couple of
>>> switches. Several people hard wire in while at Cohere but the majority
>>> don't.
>>> We have 5-10 people in the space at any time and we have Comcast Biz
>>> class 50/10 for $200/mo. It all depends on how your city is wired up. We
>>> have some special consideration being just a couple of blocks away from a
>>> large university here.
>>>
>>> Angel
>>>
>>> On Thursday, August 25, 2011 9:09:58 AM UTC-6, JJ wrote:
>>>
>>> Hey all,
>>>
>>> Without getting into too much introduction and details, I'll just cut
>>> right to it.
>>>
>>> I'm opening a space next week in South Dakota.  Working on finalizing
>>> details right now, and one thing I'm not too sure about is internet.  We've
>>> got 20 members or so pre-signed to move in day 1 and in trying to plan for
>>> the future, am trying to figure out what sort of internet speed I need, and
>>> what sort of router to handle the space's size and amount of people.  It's
>>> a long space, about 150ft, and we could very easily have 100 people
>>> accessing the network at any given time.
>>>
>>> Any of the larger spaces out there have insight?  I'm currently looking
>>> at an internet speed of 50 down/10up or 100 down/15 up.  Also am looking at
>>> 801.11n routers that have two to three adjustable networks built into the
>>> device.
>>>
>>> Would love some thoughts.
>>>
>>> Best,
>>>
>>>
>>>  *Josh Aberson*
>>> [email protected]
>>> m: 521.6158 | @JoshAberson
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> 220 S. Phillips Ave.
>>> Sioux Falls, SD 57104
>>> fb.com/workmeso
>>> @workmeso
>>> www.WorkMeso.com
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
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