Yeah.   I'm boycotting unifi. I hate that they announce a great
product and then handicap it without 802.3af Poe (yeah i know unifi ap
pro is out now but ya still can't buy it anywhere - case in point) and
without sufficient production quantity to allow resellers to keep
stock.   I fear installing 300 plus aps and then not getting
replacement parts in a years or two time.  It's not a real enterprise
solution in my eyes. Yet.

Hp, Cisco and Aruba still have the corner on the enterprise ap market
I believe.


On Aug 18, 2012, at 8:52 AM, Carl Jeptha <[email protected]> wrote:

> Did you have a look at the UBNT UNIFI system, I think it can do what you want.
>
> You have a Good Day now,
>
>
> Carl A Jeptha
> http://www.airnet.ca
> Office Phone: 1-877-534-0021 ext 206
> Office Hours: 9:00am - 5:00pm
> oovoo cajeptha
>
>
> On 17/08/2012 8:11 PM, Rick Smith wrote:
>> OK So I've got a situation here that I know you'll all love to take a whack
>> at.
>>
>> I work for a company that owns a 5 mile wide entertainment complex in NW NJ.
>>
>> Waterparks, Ski Resort, 3 Hotels, 7 Golf Courses.
>>
>> So, we've got a fiber network provided by the local telco, which provides
>> us with 20M pipes for each of our 5 campuses, and a 50M Internet connection
>> at each end of the resort, with a "flexpipe" of up to 30M in the middle
>> campus.
>>
>> Pretty neat, makes for an easy job, what with HP procurve switch
>> networks, and Mikrotik Edge routing :)  And Mikrotik WLANs provide
>> inter-campus wireless backbones in the event of a fiber failure.   All the
>> routing's handled by OSPF and MPLS...
>>
>> SOOOO.... we're about to put WiFi into all the hotels, using the
>> MSM317 unit from HP (which just rocks), and I've got a management team
>> above me telling me that they'd like to provide several levels of service:
>>
>> 1) IN our hotels, we have owners (condos) and we have rental rooms (hotel
>> guests, and timesharers off the owner rooms)
>>
>> The homeowner's assocation has been told they'll get several levels of
>> service:
>>    up to 50M for up to 2 minutes, then throttled down to 20M for 2 minutes,
>> then 5M for the rest of that session.
>>
>> Actual hotel rooms will get a straight 50M burst, with constant traffic
>> avg'd down to 5M
>>
>> I've got a switch network that has a separate vlan for owners versus admin
>> versus hotel guest port, so I have three separate (actually 7 but that's
>> other stuff...) networks on the general network in each hotel.
>>
>> Admin traffic is unburdened, of course.
>> Hotel guests are easy with a simple interface queue, right ?
>> How would you do the three level queueing ?
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