Re: WiFi courses/vendors recommendation

2015-06-03 Thread Alan Buxey
+1 for CWNP courses.  The CWNA and CWDP cover RF quite well too you'll pick 
up most of what's needed. ..imho most of the vendor specific courses only 
benefit is to tell you how to manage their control plane.  Which button to 
click on the interface etc ;)

alan


Re: WiFi courses/vendors recommendation

2015-06-02 Thread George Tasioulis
On Mon, Jun 1, 2015 at 8:23 PM, Hugo Slabbert h...@slabnet.com wrote:

 Doubt how much PoE you'd use for the MetroWifi stuff, but for the
 small/medium events Wifi coverage:

  Ubiquiti Networks.

 Its cheap and it works great. Support sucks though.


 Just watch it here if you're expecting to plug UniFi APs into standard
 802.3af/at ports and get power.  When I last interacted with them (customer
 equipment; year or two old, I believe) a lot of their WAPs are 24V, not
 802.3af/at.


Only their UniFi AP  AP-LR are 24V, all the rest of their product line
(AP-PRO, AP-AC as well as the outdoor units) are 802.3af or 802.3at
compliant.
You can easily overcome this limitation by using their 8-port ToughSwitch
were each POE port can be configured to either 24V or 48V.
IMHO Ubiquity's UniFi is a very decent solution when you want to keep
budget low.

- G.


Re: WiFi courses/vendors recommendation

2015-06-02 Thread labguy
With respect to vendor neutral training I would suggest starting with CWNP
@ www.cwnp.com.

They specialize in providing vendor-neutral Wi-Fi training and
certification.  Instructor led training is available via certified training
partners.   In addition, there are study guides available for purchase.
CWTS (lvl 0) - Intro - terms  lingo
CWNA (lvl 1) - Wi-Fi 101
CWSP (lvl 2) - Wi-Fi Security
CWDP (lvl 2) - Wi-Fi Design
CWAP (lvl2) - Wi-Fi Protocol Analysis
CWNE (lvl3)

I recommend completing some or all the CWNP training to understand how
Wi-Fi works.  Once you understand how Wi-Fi works, you'll know how to
design and configure a network to meet your design goals.  Next, complement
your vendor neutral training with applicable vendor specific training to
understand their interface and specific nuances.  Moving to another vendor
is just a matter of learning where the nerd knobs are for configuring their
product as you'll already know the fundamentals of Wi-Fi.


Kindest regards,
Troy

--
*Troy Martin* |  M 403.966.4370

On Tue, Jun 2, 2015 at 2:18 AM, George Tasioulis george.tasiou...@gmail.com
 wrote:

 On Mon, Jun 1, 2015 at 8:23 PM, Hugo Slabbert h...@slabnet.com wrote:

  Doubt how much PoE you'd use for the MetroWifi stuff, but for the
  small/medium events Wifi coverage:
 
   Ubiquiti Networks.
 
  Its cheap and it works great. Support sucks though.
 
 
  Just watch it here if you're expecting to plug UniFi APs into standard
  802.3af/at ports and get power.  When I last interacted with them
 (customer
  equipment; year or two old, I believe) a lot of their WAPs are 24V, not
  802.3af/at.


 Only their UniFi AP  AP-LR are 24V, all the rest of their product line
 (AP-PRO, AP-AC as well as the outdoor units) are 802.3af or 802.3at
 compliant.
 You can easily overcome this limitation by using their 8-port ToughSwitch
 were each POE port can be configured to either 24V or 48V.
 IMHO Ubiquity's UniFi is a very decent solution when you want to keep
 budget low.

 - G.



Re: WiFi courses/vendors recommendation

2015-06-02 Thread Josh Reynolds
If he's wanting to make a metro/muni/variousterm wireless network 
though, he's very likely not going to be using Wi-Fi at all. Sure, 
many of the products may have a WiFi PHY layer, but for outdoor PtMP 
environments you're talking TDMA, not CSMA.


He would be better served by some RF Engineering and vendor specific 
courses, IMO.


(Just my $0.02 as having spent quite a bit of time in the WISP industry, 
who has watched these metro/muni/variousterm networks die over and 
over and over again.)


Josh Reynolds
CIO, SPITwSPOTS
www.spitwspots.com

On 06/02/2015 05:06 PM, lab...@gmail.com wrote:

With respect to vendor neutral training I would suggest starting with CWNP
@ www.cwnp.com.

They specialize in providing vendor-neutral Wi-Fi training and
certification.  Instructor led training is available via certified training
partners.   In addition, there are study guides available for purchase.
CWTS (lvl 0) - Intro - terms  lingo
CWNA (lvl 1) - Wi-Fi 101
CWSP (lvl 2) - Wi-Fi Security
CWDP (lvl 2) - Wi-Fi Design
CWAP (lvl2) - Wi-Fi Protocol Analysis
CWNE (lvl3)

I recommend completing some or all the CWNP training to understand how
Wi-Fi works.  Once you understand how Wi-Fi works, you'll know how to
design and configure a network to meet your design goals.  Next, complement
your vendor neutral training with applicable vendor specific training to
understand their interface and specific nuances.  Moving to another vendor
is just a matter of learning where the nerd knobs are for configuring their
product as you'll already know the fundamentals of Wi-Fi.


Kindest regards,
Troy

--
*Troy Martin* |  M 403.966.4370

On Tue, Jun 2, 2015 at 2:18 AM, George Tasioulis george.tasiou...@gmail.com

wrote:
On Mon, Jun 1, 2015 at 8:23 PM, Hugo Slabbert h...@slabnet.com wrote:


Doubt how much PoE you'd use for the MetroWifi stuff, but for the
small/medium events Wifi coverage:

  Ubiquiti Networks.

Its cheap and it works great. Support sucks though.


Just watch it here if you're expecting to plug UniFi APs into standard
802.3af/at ports and get power.  When I last interacted with them

(customer

equipment; year or two old, I believe) a lot of their WAPs are 24V, not
802.3af/at.


Only their UniFi AP  AP-LR are 24V, all the rest of their product line
(AP-PRO, AP-AC as well as the outdoor units) are 802.3af or 802.3at
compliant.
You can easily overcome this limitation by using their 8-port ToughSwitch
were each POE port can be configured to either 24V or 48V.
IMHO Ubiquity's UniFi is a very decent solution when you want to keep
budget low.

- G.





Re: WiFi courses/vendors recommendation

2015-06-01 Thread James Bensley
On 31 May 2015 at 23:28, James Laszko jam...@mythostech.com wrote:
 I don't have a vendor-agnostic answer for you on #1, but as far as a vendor - 
 Ruckus Wireless.

+1 for Ruckus, I have worked with a Ruckus partner in the UK I can
recommend if anyone needs one. The Ruckus tin is great having seen it
to believe it. The roaming AP stuff works great.

James.


RE: WiFi courses/vendors recommendation

2015-06-01 Thread Edwards, Jermaine
Wi-Fi is a unique space especially outdoors as it is an unlicensed spectrum.  I 
would suggest looking for an engineer with at least 7 years of field experience 
along with a strong networking background.  The training will only show you how 
to configure gear and teach perfect world theory.  We all know real world isn't 
that way.

Jermaine

-Original Message-
From: NANOG [mailto:nanog-boun...@nanog.org] On Behalf Of James Bensley
Sent: Monday, June 01, 2015 04:25
To: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: WiFi courses/vendors recommendation

On 31 May 2015 at 23:28, James Laszko jam...@mythostech.com wrote:
 I don't have a vendor-agnostic answer for you on #1, but as far as a vendor - 
 Ruckus Wireless.

+1 for Ruckus, I have worked with a Ruckus partner in the UK I can
recommend if anyone needs one. The Ruckus tin is great having seen it to 
believe it. The roaming AP stuff works great.

James.


Re: WiFi courses/vendors recommendation

2015-06-01 Thread Guillaume Tournat
Fortinet has good products for wifi indoor. Not tested outdoor. 



 Le 1 juin 2015 à 00:43, Mike Lyon mike.l...@gmail.com a écrit :
 
 Ubiquiti Networks.
 
 Its cheap and it works great. Support sucks though.
 
 I use Ubuquiti gear for my wireless ISP and i use their UniFi APs for when
 i do events.
 
 If you need high density wireless, check out Xirrus Wireless access points,
 they are awesome.
 
 -Mike
 On May 31, 2015 3:30 PM, James Laszko jam...@mythostech.com wrote:
 
 I don't have a vendor-agnostic answer for you on #1, but as far as a
 vendor - Ruckus Wireless.   We are a partner who sells and deploys and the
 stuff is quite awesome for what you're looking for.  I'd be happy to
 introduce you to relevant people over there for guidance.
 
 
 Regards,
 
 
 James Laszko
 Mythos Technology Inc
 jam...@mythostech.com
 
 
 -Original Message-
 From: NANOG [mailto:nanog-boun...@nanog.org] On Behalf Of Abdullah Medhat
 Sent: Sunday, May 31, 2015 3:07 AM
 To: nanog@nanog.org
 Subject: WiFi courses/vendors recommendation
 
 Good day all,
 
 We are looking forward to establish MetroWifi network as a new business
 line in our company, in addition to small/medium events Wifi coverage.
 
 I have two questions:
 1. What are the required resources/material/training curriculum to let our
 engineers start educating in this? We are looking for the vendor-agnostic
 materials that will give our engineers the WiFi essentials/fundamentals to
 start building a good foundation before evolving to the professional level.
 
 2. What vendors do you recommend? We need to find a cost-effective yet
 competent option with good pre/post sales service.
 
 Thanks,
 
 --
 
 Abdullah Medhat
 


Re: WiFi courses/vendors recommendation

2015-06-01 Thread Josh Reynolds
That 7 year requirement is the most off the wall statement. Do you 
work in HR? :)


How about find somebody with experience, ideally somebody who's done 
high-level work for a W/ISP.


Josh Reynolds
CIO, SPITwSPOTS
www.spitwspots.com

On 06/01/2015 08:29 AM, Edwards, Jermaine wrote:

Wi-Fi is a unique space especially outdoors as it is an unlicensed spectrum.  I 
would suggest looking for an engineer with at least 7 years of field experience 
along with a strong networking background.  The training will only show you how 
to configure gear and teach perfect world theory.  We all know real world isn't 
that way.

Jermaine

-Original Message-
From: NANOG [mailto:nanog-boun...@nanog.org] On Behalf Of James Bensley
Sent: Monday, June 01, 2015 04:25
To: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: WiFi courses/vendors recommendation

On 31 May 2015 at 23:28, James Laszko jam...@mythostech.com wrote:

I don't have a vendor-agnostic answer for you on #1, but as far as a vendor - 
Ruckus Wireless.

+1 for Ruckus, I have worked with a Ruckus partner in the UK I can
recommend if anyone needs one. The Ruckus tin is great having seen it to 
believe it. The roaming AP stuff works great.

James.




Re: WiFi courses/vendors recommendation

2015-06-01 Thread Josh Reynolds
They come from the outdoor WISP space, so most of their gear is 24v 
passive POE.


However, they have multiple models of 802.3at/af switches now (up to 48 
port), two routers with 24v/48v PoE output capability, and several UniFi 
APs that are either 802.3af or 802.3at.


Josh Reynolds
CIO, SPITwSPOTS
www.spitwspots.com

On 06/01/2015 09:23 AM, Hugo Slabbert wrote:
Doubt how much PoE you'd use for the MetroWifi stuff, but for the 
small/medium events Wifi coverage:



Ubiquiti Networks.

Its cheap and it works great. Support sucks though.


Just watch it here if you're expecting to plug UniFi APs into standard 
802.3af/at ports and get power.  When I last interacted with them 
(customer equipment; year or two old, I believe) a lot of their WAPs 
are 24V, not 802.3af/at.






Re: WiFi courses/vendors recommendation

2015-06-01 Thread Michel Luczak
 
 Just watch it here if you're expecting to plug UniFi APs into standard 
 802.3af/at ports and get power.  When I last interacted with them (customer 
 equipment; year or two old, I believe) a lot of their WAPs are 24V, not 
 802.3af/at.

The Pro and AC models are 802af/at. Only the “not Pro” (2.4 GHz only) model is 
passive 24V PoE but anyway it’s sh*t and not usable for any serious application.

BR, Michel Luczak



Re: WiFi courses/vendors recommendation

2015-06-01 Thread Hugo Slabbert
Doubt how much PoE you'd use for the MetroWifi stuff, but for the 
small/medium events Wifi coverage:



Ubiquiti Networks.

Its cheap and it works great. Support sucks though.


Just watch it here if you're expecting to plug UniFi APs into standard 
802.3af/at ports and get power.  When I last interacted with them (customer 
equipment; year or two old, I believe) a lot of their WAPs are 24V, not 
802.3af/at.


--
Hugo


signature.asc
Description: Digital signature


RE: WiFi courses/vendors recommendation

2015-05-31 Thread James Laszko
I don't have a vendor-agnostic answer for you on #1, but as far as a vendor - 
Ruckus Wireless.   We are a partner who sells and deploys and the stuff is 
quite awesome for what you're looking for.  I'd be happy to introduce you to 
relevant people over there for guidance.


Regards,


James Laszko
Mythos Technology Inc
jam...@mythostech.com


-Original Message-
From: NANOG [mailto:nanog-boun...@nanog.org] On Behalf Of Abdullah Medhat
Sent: Sunday, May 31, 2015 3:07 AM
To: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: WiFi courses/vendors recommendation

Good day all,

We are looking forward to establish MetroWifi network as a new business line in 
our company, in addition to small/medium events Wifi coverage.

I have two questions:
1. What are the required resources/material/training curriculum to let our 
engineers start educating in this? We are looking for the vendor-agnostic 
materials that will give our engineers the WiFi essentials/fundamentals to 
start building a good foundation before evolving to the professional level.

2. What vendors do you recommend? We need to find a cost-effective yet 
competent option with good pre/post sales service.

Thanks,

-- 

Abdullah Medhat


WiFi courses/vendors recommendation

2015-05-31 Thread Abdullah Medhat
Good day all,

We are looking forward to establish MetroWifi network as a new business
line in our company, in addition to small/medium events Wifi coverage.

I have two questions:
1. What are the required resources/material/training curriculum to let our
engineers start educating in this? We are looking for the vendor-agnostic
materials that will give our engineers the WiFi essentials/fundamentals to
start building a good foundation before evolving to the professional level.

2. What vendors do you recommend? We need to find a cost-effective yet
competent option with good pre/post sales service.

Thanks,

-- 

Abdullah Medhat


Re: WiFi courses/vendors recommendation

2015-05-31 Thread Ilissa Miller
You may want to check out iBwave.  They do training as well.

Ilissa Miller


 On May 31, 2015, at 3:27 PM, Abdullah Medhat 
 abdullah.medhat.sa...@gmail.com wrote:

 Good day all,

 We are looking forward to establish MetroWifi network as a new business
 line in our company, in addition to small/medium events Wifi coverage.

 I have two questions:
 1. What are the required resources/material/training curriculum to let our
 engineers start educating in this? We are looking for the vendor-agnostic
 materials that will give our engineers the WiFi essentials/fundamentals to
 start building a good foundation before evolving to the professional level.

 2. What vendors do you recommend? We need to find a cost-effective yet
 competent option with good pre/post sales service.

 Thanks,

 --

 Abdullah Medhat


Re: WiFi courses/vendors recommendation

2015-05-31 Thread Dave Taht
On Sun, May 31, 2015 at 3:28 PM, James Laszko jam...@mythostech.com wrote:
 I don't have a vendor-agnostic answer for you on #1, but as far as a vendor - 
 Ruckus Wireless.   We are a partner who sells and deploys and the stuff is 
 quite awesome for what you're looking for.  I'd be happy to introduce you to 
 relevant people over there for guidance.


1) I have long thought about developing such course materials or
working with the author (dave lang) of the wonderful scale2012 report
to do so. If you find any good materials pre-existing please let me
know also. I once gave a good intro talk on wifi subjects... (
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wksh2DPHCDI )

As for 2)

There are many vendors in the enterprise wifi space - cisco, ubnt,
aruba, and meraki, to name a few more. Of these the only ones publicly
acknowledging doing something about their wifi bufferbloat are cisco
and meraki. (I realize you have plenty of other issues/features to
look for, it's fixing that one happens to be my number #1 requirement
these days)

 Regards,


 James Laszko
 Mythos Technology Inc
 jam...@mythostech.com


 -Original Message-
 From: NANOG [mailto:nanog-boun...@nanog.org] On Behalf Of Abdullah Medhat
 Sent: Sunday, May 31, 2015 3:07 AM
 To: nanog@nanog.org
 Subject: WiFi courses/vendors recommendation

 Good day all,

 We are looking forward to establish MetroWifi network as a new business line 
 in our company, in addition to small/medium events Wifi coverage.

 I have two questions:
 1. What are the required resources/material/training curriculum to let our 
 engineers start educating in this? We are looking for the vendor-agnostic 
 materials that will give our engineers the WiFi essentials/fundamentals to 
 start building a good foundation before evolving to the professional level.

 2. What vendors do you recommend? We need to find a cost-effective yet 
 competent option with good pre/post sales service.

 Thanks,

 --

 Abdullah Medhat



-- 
Dave Täht
What will it take to vastly improve wifi for everyone?
https://plus.google.com/u/0/explore/makewififast


RE: WiFi courses/vendors recommendation

2015-05-31 Thread Mike Lyon
Ubiquiti Networks.

Its cheap and it works great. Support sucks though.

I use Ubuquiti gear for my wireless ISP and i use their UniFi APs for when
i do events.

If you need high density wireless, check out Xirrus Wireless access points,
they are awesome.

-Mike
On May 31, 2015 3:30 PM, James Laszko jam...@mythostech.com wrote:

 I don't have a vendor-agnostic answer for you on #1, but as far as a
 vendor - Ruckus Wireless.   We are a partner who sells and deploys and the
 stuff is quite awesome for what you're looking for.  I'd be happy to
 introduce you to relevant people over there for guidance.


 Regards,


 James Laszko
 Mythos Technology Inc
 jam...@mythostech.com


 -Original Message-
 From: NANOG [mailto:nanog-boun...@nanog.org] On Behalf Of Abdullah Medhat
 Sent: Sunday, May 31, 2015 3:07 AM
 To: nanog@nanog.org
 Subject: WiFi courses/vendors recommendation

 Good day all,

 We are looking forward to establish MetroWifi network as a new business
 line in our company, in addition to small/medium events Wifi coverage.

 I have two questions:
 1. What are the required resources/material/training curriculum to let our
 engineers start educating in this? We are looking for the vendor-agnostic
 materials that will give our engineers the WiFi essentials/fundamentals to
 start building a good foundation before evolving to the professional level.

 2. What vendors do you recommend? We need to find a cost-effective yet
 competent option with good pre/post sales service.

 Thanks,

 --

 Abdullah Medhat