If this is the case, I think the documentation needs an adjustment to
recommend one or the other depending on needs. The Manage My Keys
application will need a labeling tweak too, but I expect that is coming.

This is not giving me problems personally, but I already have some very
confused people asking questions. Change may be a constant in the IT
world, but it flusters a lot of other people! The campus KB section is
thin at the moment, but I expect that will improve with experience.

I am really pleased to have this and the CalVisitor service.


Graham

On 11/5/14 11:14 AM, Mike Howard wrote:
> Graham,
> 
> I think you'll have the best experience if you configure your WiFi
> devices to only use one of the campus SSIDs, and delete or disable the
> other profiles. The WiFi controllers can interpret rapid jumping between
> different SSIDs as a malfunction, and can cause the client to be briefly
> excluded from the network, which looks like an authentication failure.
> 
> On Wed, Nov 5, 2014 at 10:18 AM, Isaac Orr <[email protected]
> <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
> 
>     Hi Graham,
> 
>     In every way other than the username you use, and the SSID you connect
>     to, eduroam and AirBears2 are identical when you are connecting at UC
>     Berkeley.  Same address space, same access, etc.
> 
>     Some of us here in the network group have even deleted the AirBears2
>     SSID from our devices - simpler just to use a network we know should
>     work both here and many other places.
> 
>     iso
> 
> 
>     On Wed, Nov 5, 2014 at 10:14 AM, Graham Patterson
>     <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
>     >
>     > Interesting. If I tell the device to forget AirBears2, I can get the
>     > eduroam connection to give me the certificate to accept. After a
>     couple
>     > of tries I got it to accept and connect.
>     >
>     > Going back to reconnect to AirBears2, I get the "Unable to join the
>     > network 'AirBears2'" message. In other words I have reversed the
>     problem.
>     >
>     > As long as eduroam is functionally the same as AirBears2, I may as
>     well
>     > leave this device set that way. I don't plan on any globe-trotting
>     very
>     > soon, but one never knows.
>     >
>     > Which brings up another question: is the eduroam address space
>     conflated
>     > with AirBears2? or is there a specific range set aside for it? I only
>     > ask in case I need it for connection diagnostics with any of the
>     servers
>     > I manage.
>     >
>     > This is a really nice step forward, by the way.
>     >
>     >
>     > Graham
>     >
>     > On 11/5/14 9:33 AM, Isaac Orr wrote:
>     >> Hi Graham,
>     >>
>     >> Have you tried just doing a reset for the network settings?  If the
>     >> device is working for AirBears2 you'll end up having to re-enter that
>     >> as well though.
>     >>
>     >>
>     >> iso
>     >>
>     >>
>     >> On Wed, Nov 5, 2014 at 9:13 AM, Graham Patterson
>     <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
>     >>>
>     >>> Running a few tests:
>     >>>
>     >>> iOS 6 device will not connect.
>     >>>
>     >>> iOS 8 device does connect.
>     >>>
>     >>> OSX 10.9 computer does connect.
>     >>>
>     >>> To get the iOS 8 device to connect I had to disconnect from the
>     network,
>     >>> and then manually select eduroam before the device latched onto
>     >>> AirBears2. That way I received the certificate request after
>     entering my
>     >>> credentials. That trick does not seem to work with the iOS 6 device,
>     >>> even with 'Auto Join' off.
>     >>>
>     >>> If there is a way to cajole or coerce an iOS 6 device into
>     eduroam, I'd
>     >>> be interested to hear it. A new iPod is _not_ on my Christmas List!
>     >>>
>     >>> Graham
>     >>> --
>     >>> Graham Patterson, Systems Administrator
>     >>> Lawrence Hall of Science, UC Berkeley   510-643-2222
>     <tel:510-643-2222>
>     >>> "...past the iguana, the tyrannosaurus, the mastodon, the
>     mathematical
>     >>> puzzles, and the meteorite..." - directions to my office.
>     >>>
>     >>>
>     >>>
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>     >>> To learn more about Micronet, including how to subscribe to or
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>     >>>
>     >>> http://micronet.berkeley.edu
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>     >>> Messages you send to this mailing list are public and
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> 
> 
> -- 
> Mike Howard
> Network Engineer
> UC Berkeley SAIT


-- 
Graham Patterson, Systems Administrator
Lawrence Hall of Science, UC Berkeley   510-643-2222
"...past the iguana, the tyrannosaurus, the mastodon, the mathematical
puzzles, and the meteorite..." - directions to my office.

 
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