RE: [WIRELESS-LAN] Client location / tracking...

2012-09-21 Thread Cappalli, Tim G @ LSC-OIT
I've used the AirWave Management Client on a laptop before which can help you 
hunt down a device. You can download it from inside the AirWave GUI under 
Documentation.



Tim Cappalli, ACMP CCNA | (802) 626-6456
Assistant Network Administrator
Office of Information Technology (OIT) | Lyndon
 cappa...@lyndonstate.edumailto:cappa...@lyndonstate.edu | 
 oit.lyndonstate.eduhttp://oit.lyndonstate.edu/

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Sent from Windows 8 and Outlook 2013

-Original Message-
From: The EDUCAUSE Wireless Issues Constituent Group Listserv 
[mailto:WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU] On Behalf Of Robertson, Joshua A.
Sent: Friday, September 21, 2012 1:01 PM
To: WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU
Subject: Re: [WIRELESS-LAN] Client location / tracking...



I got a Fluke AirCheck this summer and have found its locate feature to work 
quite well with the (optional) directional antenna.  It graphs the signal 
strength and also can play sounds (lower/slower = farther, higher/quicker = 
closer).  My student workers have been able to quickly pick up how to use it 
and effectively track down devices.



http://www.flukenetworks.com/enterprise-network/network-testing/AirCheck-Wi-Fi-Tester



Josh Robertson

Network Systems Senior Engineer

Old Dominion University

Office of Computing  Communications Services

(757)683-5046

j2rob...@odu.edumailto:j2rob...@odu.edu

http://occs.odu.edu/







-Original Message-

From: The EDUCAUSE Wireless Issues Constituent Group Listserv 
[mailto:WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU] On Behalf Of Jeff Kell

Sent: Friday, September 21, 2012 12:38 PM

To: 
WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDUmailto:WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU

Subject: [WIRELESS-LAN] Client location / tracking...



I was wondering what other folks are doing for client location in cases where 
you have a problem with a client, random interference, trying to locate a 
stolen device, etc.



We are an Aruba shop and have Airwave, which will get you in the general 
vicinity; but in crowded or multi-floor buildings it's really just a rough 
guesstimate.



There are numerous tracking / pinging / location utilities for identifying APs, 
but not that much for tracking actual clients.



I would guess you need a promiscuous mode wireless adapter/driver combination 
and some sort of directional antenna at the very least, but rather than second 
guess myself and start playing around with Pringles cans grin I thought I'd 
ask first rather than reinventing the wheel.



Thanks in advance,



Jeff



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iOS 6 Wireless Issues

2012-09-19 Thread Cappalli, Tim G @ LSC-OIT
I experienced some dropouts and random redirects to an Apple page cannot be 
displayed page after updating an iPad 3, err new iPad, to iOS 6. A few articles 
are floating around that suggest tweaking the proxy settings resolves the issue.

http://gizmodo.com/5944761/does-ios-6-have-a-wi+fi-bug

Tim Cappalli, ACMP CCNA | (802) 626-6456
Office of Information Technology (OIT) | Lyndon
 cappa...@lyndonstate.edumailto:cappa...@lyndonstate.edu | 
 oit.lyndonstate.eduhttp://oit.lyndonstate.edu/

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RE: Aruba DHCP fingerprinting

2012-08-31 Thread Cappalli, Tim G @ LSC-OIT
Anyone find a unique fingerprint for AppleTV's? I did a capture with our test 
ATV and option 55 was the same as iOS.

Thanks

From: The EDUCAUSE Wireless Issues Constituent Group Listserv 
[mailto:WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU] On Behalf Of Randall C Grimshaw
Sent: Friday, August 24, 2012 1:52 PM
To: WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU
Subject: Re: [WIRELESS-LAN] Aruba DHCP fingerprinting

VendClassId: PS Vita
Fingerprint: 1-3-15-6

I do not know how to translate that into the Aruba encryption.

Randall Grimshaw rgrim...@syr.edumailto:rgrim...@syr.edu


From: The EDUCAUSE Wireless Issues Constituent Group Listserv 
[WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU] on behalf of Kellogg, Brian D. 
[bkell...@sbu.edu]
Sent: Friday, August 24, 2012 1:42 PM
To: 
WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDUmailto:WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU
Subject: [WIRELESS-LAN] Aruba DHCP fingerprinting
Does anyone out there using Aruba gear have the DHCP fingerprints for the 
following that they would be willing to share?  I don't have any to do a 
capture with.

Kindles
PS Vita

Any other would be welcome as well.  Below are some I've been able to gather.

aaa derivation-rules user Auth_Pass
  set role condition dhcp-option equals 370103060F77FC set-value guest 
description iOS
  set role condition dhcp-option equals 37011c02030f06770c2c2f1a792a 
set-value guest description iPad
  set role condition dhcp-option starts-with 0c616E64726F69645F set-value 
guest description Android 2.3.X
  set role condition dhcp-option starts-with 3c6468637063642034 set-value 
guest description Android 2.X
  set role condition dhcp-option starts-with 37017921030 set-value guest 
description Android 2.X
  set role condition dhcp-option equals 3701792103061c333a3b set-value guest 
description Android 2(2)
  set role condition dhcp-option equals 3C426C61636B426572727 set-value guest 
description Blackberry
  set role condition dhcp-option equals 370103060f2c2e2 set-value guest 
description Win7 Phones
  set role condition dhcp-option equals 
3c4d6963726f736f66742057696e646f77732043450 set-value guest description 
Windows Mobile
  set role condition dhcp-option equals 3C426C61636B4265727279 set-value 
guest description Blackberry2
  set role condition dhcp-option equals 37012103060f1c333a3b set-value guest 
description Android 4.0.X
  set role condition dhcp-option equals 37012103061c333a3b set-value guest 
description Android 4.0.X(2)
  set role condition dhcp-option equals 3C58626F7820333630 set-value guest 
description XBox360
  set role condition dhcp-option starts-with 3701030f06 set-value guest 
description PS3
  set role condition dhcp-option equals 3701031c060f set-value guest 
description PS3
  set role condition dhcp-option equals 0C576969 set-value guest description 
Wii
  set role condition dhcp-option equals 37010306 set-value guest description 
Nintendo DS
  set role condition dhcp-option equals 370103060f0c set-value guest 
description Roku
  set role condition dhcp-option equals 3c64686370636420342e302e3135 
set-value guest description Android
  set role condition dhcp-option equals 370103060F set-value guest 
description BlackBerry
  set role condition dhcp-option equals 370C060F01031C78 set-value guest 
description Symbian OS
  set role condition dhcp-option equals 370103060f2c2e2f set-value guest 
description Win Mobile 6.X
!

Thanks,
Brian
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Constituent Group discussion list can be found at 
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RE: [WIRELESS-LAN] SSID Supression

2012-08-27 Thread Cappalli, Tim G @ LSC-OIT
We notice that Mac OS always seems to jump back to our open network unless you 
manually remove it. On Windows, our connection utility removes the open network 
so that the students do not continue to use it.


Tim Cappalli, ACMP CCNA | (802) 626-6456
Office of Information Technology (OIT) | Lyndon
 cappa...@lyndonstate.edumailto:cappa...@lyndonstate.edu | 
 oit.lyndonstate.eduhttp://oit.lyndonstate.edu/

[cid:image001.png@01CD7CA8.ADB45900]

Sent from Windows 8 and Outlook 2013

From: The EDUCAUSE Wireless Issues Constituent Group Listserv 
[mailto:WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU] On Behalf Of John Kaftan
Sent: Monday, August 27, 2012 3:53 PM
To: WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU
Subject: [WIRELESS-LAN] SSID Supression

We suppress our 802.1x SSID to prevent people from connecting to it before they 
are properly configured.  I have noticed 802.1x clients dropping back to our 
open network on a regular basis.  I am wondering if it is because of the SSID 
broadcast suppression.  Perhaps the broadcasted networks look better for some 
reason and the clients choose to jump.  Has anyone else noticed this?

John
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RE: [WIRELESS-LAN] Betr.: Re: [WIRELESS-LAN] Wireless Client Subnet sizing

2012-08-02 Thread Cappalli, Tim G @ LSC-OIT
ClearPass will only be required for residence hall/guest environments. Static 
device setup will be available in the base controller code. So if you wanted to 
make available a classroom AppleTV or printer, you could do that right in the 
controller. ClearPass adds user awareness and creates a personal network for 
all the user's devices.



Tim Cappalli, ACMP CCNA | (802) 626-6456
Office of Information Technology (OIT) | Lyndon
 cappa...@lyndonstate.edumailto:cappa...@lyndonstate.edu | 
 oit.lyndonstate.eduhttp://oit.lyndonstate.edu/

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-Original Message-
From: The EDUCAUSE Wireless Issues Constituent Group Listserv 
[mailto:WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU] On Behalf Of Marcelo Lew
Sent: Thursday, August 02, 2012 4:58 PM
To: WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU
Subject: Re: [WIRELESS-LAN] Betr.: Re: [WIRELESS-LAN] Wireless Client Subnet 
sizing



Aruba is doing BC/MC location based with a feature they call AirGroup, but it 
requires another appliance (ClearPass) in conjunction with the controllers.



Marcelo Lew

Wireless Enterprise Administrator

University Technology Services

University of Denver

Desk: (303) 871-6523

Cell: (303) 669-4217

Fax:  (303) 871-5900

Email: m...@du.edumailto:m...@du.edu







-Original Message-

From: The EDUCAUSE Wireless Issues Constituent Group Listserv 
[mailto:WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU]mailto:[mailto:WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU]
 On Behalf Of Luke Jenkins

Sent: Thursday, August 02, 2012 2:23 PM

To: 
WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDUmailto:WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU

Subject: Re: [WIRELESS-LAN] Betr.: Re: [WIRELESS-LAN] Wireless Client Subnet 
sizing



Not sure about the other vendors, but Cisco has the multicast part covered with 
the the multicast vlan feature included in 7.x code.



... The WLC will make sure that all multicast streams from the clients on this 
VLAN pool will always go out on the multicast  VLAN. This ensures that the 
upstream router has just one entry for all the VLANs of the VLAN pool. As a 
result, only one multicast stream will hit the VLAN pool even if the clients 
are on different VLANs. Therefore, the multicast packets also sent out on the 
air will be just one stream.



http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/ps10315/products_tech_note09186a0080bb4900.shtml



-Luke



=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=

Luke Jenkins

Network Engineer

Weber State University







On Aug 2, 2012, at 12:05 PM, Hanset, Philippe C 
phan...@utk.edumailto:phan...@utk.edu wrote:



 Craig,



 That's a very good point to remind us. It's easy to forget that with

 VLAN pooling each Access-Point does broadcast to all members based on VLANs 
 represented on that Access-Point. With the scenario that you demonstrate (we 
 have the same geographical behavior with class changes), eventually the 
 advantage of VLAN pooling tends to disappear, especially in well travelled 
 areas, the ones where we have so many people per AP that we really don't want 
 any BC or MC traffic!



 Here is what I would like to see in the future:

 One large VLAN for the entire WLAN (yes, you read that well, just like the 
 good all days), with dynamic BC/MC filtering based on location.

 So basically your controllers will be geographically aware of groups

 of Access-Points that need to talk to each other but will not let the 
 BroadCast and MultiCast traffic go beyond those boundaries. And then ARP 
 proxy to limit the ARP traffic.

 This would address Mobility within the WLAN, and could even address

 Bonjour, while cleaning the air from distant BC/MC that you don't

 want to see. It might even provide a little more security since you

 have to be in the region to mess with the device ;-)



 It is not uncommon to go back to initial conditions, but in the smarter way!

 FishTetrapodMammalAquatic Mammal  ;-)



 Any vendor ready to implement this?

 Drawbacks?

 (Are there cases of people interested to remotely operate an AppleTV

 from one end of campus to another end of campus?)



 Philippe



 Philippe Hanset

 Univ. of TN, Knoxville

 www.eduroamus.orghttp://www.eduroamus.org







 On Aug 2, 2012, at 1:06 PM, Craig Simons wrote:



 This is what we've been doing for years (except we're using /22s). The issue 
 that we see now is that with near 100% wireless coverage on our main campus, 
 there are no dead spots or bad roaming areas. Users authenticate in on area 
 and move to the next area. Take the following scenario:



 100 students attend a lecture in building A. 25 of these students 
 authenticated to wireless on the east side of campus on controller 1 (they 
 received an IP in the range 

RE: Domain Logon Over Wireless

2012-07-30 Thread Cappalli, Tim G @ LSC-OIT
If the laptops have Windows 7, you can do user single sign-on which will 
initiate 1x using the credentials and associate before contacting the domain 
controller for login.

All our college Windows 7/8 devices have this setup and it works great.


Tim Cappalli, ACMP CCNA | (802) 626-6456
Office of Information Technology (OIT) | Lyndon
» cappa...@lyndonstate.edu | oit.lyndonstate.edu

From: The EDUCAUSE Wireless Issues Constituent Group Listserv 
[WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU] on behalf of Danner, Mearl 
[jmdan...@samford.edu]
Sent: Monday, July 30, 2012 4:41 PM
To: WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU
Subject: Re: [WIRELESS-LAN] Domain Logon Over Wireless

If you've got Windows IAS (or NPS) it's easy to create a policy that allows 
access to members of the Domain Computers group (or any group of computers you 
want to allow). Put it at the top so that reads the computer login policy 
before it gets to the ones for the user based wireless users.

You can contact me off list if you need details.


Mearl Danner
Systems Programmer
Samford University Technology Services
jmdanner at samford.edu
http://www.samford.edu



-Original Message-
From: The EDUCAUSE Wireless Issues Constituent Group Listserv 
[mailto:WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU] On Behalf Of Case, Brandon J
Sent: Monday, July 30, 2012 2:55 PM
To: WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU
Subject: [WIRELESS-LAN] Domain Logon Over Wireless

Has anyone out there tried doing domain logons over a 1x-enabled network? We 
have a request in from one department (and potentially others) to offer such a 
service. Their goal is to create learning lab environments where students can 
use laptops that are dedicated just for the room the lab is in. However, they 
also want to be able to join these laptops to their departmental domain in 
order to do patching etc. so the machines have to be able to log on to the 
network while no user is logged on to the machine.

Google searches until my eyes are bloodshot all say it can only be done with 
EAP-TLS and machine certificates, which always leads to using Microsoft 
Certificate Services. I'm no Windows Server buff so all the magic that happens 
between laptop and domain controllers is smoke and mirrors to me. Even if that 
can be side-stepped somehow, the thought of private PKI management isn't one I 
relish. Any hints anyone can offer would be wonderful.

Thanks,
--
Brandon Case
Network Engineer, ITaP
Purdue University
ca...@purdue.edu
Office: (765) 49-67096
Mobile: (765) 421-6259
Fax:(765) 49-46620

PGP Fingerprint:
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RE: Apple Petition- Mid-Week Sanity Check

2012-07-12 Thread Cappalli, Tim G @ LSC-OIT
I agree that there is a need to address all of the enterprise issues. We are 
really struggling with the AppleID on iOS and it is going to get 10x worse for 
us when we are forced to use Mountain Lion and everything has to come to the 
app store.

Maybe dividing it by topic is the best way though. Networking issues, 
software/OS deployement issues, etc.

Tim Cappalli, ACMP CCNA | (802) 626-6456
Office of Information Technology (OIT) | Lyndon
 cappa...@lyndonstate.edumailto:cappa...@lyndonstate.edu | 
 oit.lyndonstate.eduhttp://it.lyndonstate.edu/

[cid:image001.png@01CD601B.BD3038D0]http://facebook.com/LyndonOIT[cid:image002.png@01CD601B.BD3038D0]http://twitter.com/#!/LyndonOIT[cid:image003.png@01CD601B.BD3038D0]http://gplus.to/LyndonOIT

From: The EDUCAUSE Wireless Issues Constituent Group Listserv 
[mailto:WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU] On Behalf Of Kellogg, Brian D.
Sent: Thursday, July 12, 2012 10:43 AM
To: WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU
Subject: Re: [WIRELESS-LAN] Apple Petition- Mid-Week Sanity Check

I don't use facebook so I think this would be a good move.

After discussing this with a colleague at another university I believe a 
broader approach than just addressing Bonjour is justified.  Apple does have 
many deficiencies to address in the enterprise.

From: The EDUCAUSE Wireless Issues Constituent Group Listserv 
[mailto:WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU]mailto:[mailto:WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU]
 On Behalf Of Garry Peirce
Sent: Thursday, July 12, 2012 1:26 AM
To: 
WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDUmailto:WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU
Subject: Re: Apple Petition- Mid-Week Sanity Check

Hearing that some do not use FB that wish to sign, perhaps moving it to a site 
like http://www.change.orghttp://www.change.org/ is a possibility, or perhaps 
a page could be hosted on the Educause website itself?

The petition's main statement reads:

We the undersigned academic and research institutions request that Apple 
provide support for Bonjour/Airplay technology in enterprise networks.
Might I suggest a possible refinement to:

We the undersigned academic and research institutions request that Apple 
collaborate with us to improve Bonjour/Airplay technologies in enterprise 
networks.

For me, if DNS-SD worked for Airplay (as it does for printing) , my current 
hurdle would largely be solved.
That would also require the AppleTV concession made to content-providers 
relaxed or removed.
Perhaps they could make an alternative AppleTV image that allows DNS-SD to 
work, but removes the content-provider features (?).

If one needs both the content services and Airplay across subnets, that seems 
the immediate problem we'd like Apple to help solve in lieu of other 
proprietary solutions.





From: The EDUCAUSE Wireless Issues Constituent Group Listserv 
[mailto:WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU]mailto:[mailto:WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU]
 On Behalf Of Jesse Rink
Sent: Wednesday, July 11, 2012 7:34 PM
To: 
WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDUmailto:WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU
Subject: Re: [WIRELESS-LAN] Apple Petition- Mid-Week Sanity Check

So for those of us without Facebook, no way of signing it?

From: The EDUCAUSE Wireless Issues Constituent Group Listserv 
[mailto:WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU]mailto:[mailto:WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU]
 On Behalf Of Lee H Badman
Sent: Wednesday, July 11, 2012 8:14 AM
To: 
WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDUmailto:WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU
Subject: [WIRELESS-LAN] Apple Petition- Mid-Week Sanity Check

Folks,

Those interested seem to agree that we'd discuss specific pain points regarding 
those other Apple devices like AppleTv and any AirPlay/Bonjour-dependent 
gadgets until Friday, at which point we'd firm up the petition and find a place 
to host it. Then would come signatures, and ultimately presenting it to Apple, 
possibly via each of our Apple reps.

Neil Johnson has started the companion Facebook group, and has drafted the 
early version of what everyone appears to want from Apple development in 
petition form at https://www.facebook.com/groups/enterpriseairplay with 72 
members joining thus far. (Thanks, Neil)

We have at least one CIO interested, and interested in sharing it with other 
CIOs via Educause if petition is done in a constructive, fact-based way.

We also have a bit of media coverage coming soon on the process, with 
potentially more to follow.

A lot of excellent technical discussion has been spawned during all of this, 
and as usual, the interaction has been great between list members.

All of that being said, it is worth asking:


* Is the group still feeling good about the direction this initiative 
is going in?

* Does anyone have any problems with the wording and points in the doc 
so far?

* Is everyone interested able to sign on behalf of their 
institution/organization? If not, can you get empowered or find someone who can 
sign?

* Has anyone else 

RE: [WIRELESS-LAN] You knew it was coming...Airplay/Apple TV support for instructors.

2012-07-05 Thread Cappalli, Tim G @ LSC-OIT
We tell students this and they do not like that answer! I would definitely 
support an Educause petition to Apple about Bonjour along with the 
AppleID/AppStore process (which is going to be a mess for us with Mountain 
Lion).


Tim Cappalli, ACMP CCNA | (802) 626-6456
Office of Information Technology (OIT) | Lyndon
» cappa...@lyndonstate.edumailto:cappa...@lyndonstate.edu | 
oit.lyndonstate.eduhttp://it.lyndonstate.edu/

[cid:image001.png@01CD5A95.5B1FF3A0]http://facebook.com/LyndonOIT[cid:image002.png@01CD5A95.5B1FF3A0]http://twitter.com/#!/LyndonOIT[cid:image003.png@01CD5A95.5B1FF3A0]http://gplus.to/LyndonOIT

From: The EDUCAUSE Wireless Issues Constituent Group Listserv 
[mailto:WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU] On Behalf Of jkaf...@utica.edu
Sent: Thursday, July 05, 2012 9:11 AM
To: WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU
Subject: Re: [WIRELESS-LAN] You knew it was coming...Airplay/Apple TV support 
for instructors.

Has anyone tried not supporting Bonjour and directing users who complain to 
Apple?  Perhaps if we all did that it would get Apple's attention.

John Kaftan
Infrastructure Manager
Utica College

- Reply message -
From: Andy Voelker avoel...@email.wcu.edu
Date: Thu, Jul 5, 2012 8:23 am
Subject: [WIRELESS-LAN] You knew it was coming...Airplay/Apple TV support for 
instructors.
To: WIRELESS-LAN@listserv.educause.edu

Ours completely denied the existence of a possible issue.  Of course, you could 
see in his eyes that his answer was somewhat forced...

-- Andy Voelker
Manager of Student Computing in the Technology Commons
WCU Staff Senator
Western Carolina University
Check the status of your IT requests at any time at http://help.wcu.edu/ !


-Original Message-
From: The EDUCAUSE Wireless Issues Constituent Group Listserv 
[mailto:WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU] On Behalf Of Kellogg, Brian D.
Sent: Tuesday, July 03, 2012 5:48 PM
To: WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU
Subject: Re: [WIRELESS-LAN] You knew it was coming...Airplay/Apple TV support 
for instructors.

I did and it was less productive than spitting into the wind.  They really 
don't care and have the attitude that the consumer demand will dictate others 
find solutions to their protocol deficiencies.  At least that was my 
impression.  It still befuddles me you just can't plug in a FQDN or IP address 
for Airplay to connect to.

Brian


From: The EDUCAUSE Wireless Issues Constituent Group Listserv 
[WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU] On Behalf Of Lee H Badman 
[lhbad...@syr.edu]
Sent: Tuesday, July 03, 2012 10:15 AM
To: WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU
Subject: Re: You knew it was coming...Airplay/Apple TV support for instructors.

Has anyone else attempted to voice concern to their Apple reps about their 
non-business-class features and reliance on Bonjour on these gadgets? I know 
they seem to listen to no one, and given their market share likely feel like 
they don't have to. But is anyone making the attempt to get feedback to Apple?

The thought of architecting around non-standards-based toys just feels 
unpleasant.

-Curious in Syracuse



Lee H. Badman

Wireless/Network Engineer

Information Technology and Services

Adjunct Instructor, iSchool

Syracuse University

315 443-3003




-Original Message-
From: The EDUCAUSE Wireless Issues Constituent Group Listserv 
[mailto:WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU] On Behalf Of Hanset, Philippe C
Sent: Tuesday, July 03, 2012 10:03 AM
To: WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU
Subject: Re: [WIRELESS-LAN] You knew it was coming...Airplay/Apple TV support 
for instructors.

Mike,

For a one off and minimal investment, I would bring up an Open-WRT or DDRT AP 
(or any affordable AP that is capable of doing WPA2-enterprise) independent 
from your regular infrastructure and make people join a dedicated subnet for 
that room (use NAT, and WPA2-enterprise).
Connect the Apple TV to the wired port of the AP and broadcast a dedicated SSID.
With WPA2-enterprise joining your RADIUS server you can make it secure.

It is a dirty solution, electromagnetically speaking, but quick.

If the conference room has too may users for one AP, create a dedicated SSID 
just for that conference room on your existing infrastructure and terminate the 
VLAN of that SSID on the same VLAN as the AppleTV

Philippe Hanset
Univ. of TN
www.eduroamus.org

On Jul 3, 2012, at 9:06 AM, Mike King wrote:

 So I have Cisco Wireless, and I've just been asked to make Airplay work in a 
 conference room.  We do not have multicast enable (anywhere).

 Asking for details, I've been told it's only this one conference room.
 (I someone believe this, as it the only one that has a projector that
 get's any use)

 Suggestions for this as a one off?  I have idea's one what to do for a 
 campus wide deployment, but that will take me significantly longer to deploy, 
 and my boss is asking me to have this done this week.

 Right now, we have a single WPA2/enterprise SSID, and the 

RE: [WIRELESS-LAN] Location Based Printing

2012-05-31 Thread Cappalli, Tim G @ LSC-OIT
You don't have to use CPPM if you are setting up static printers and media 
devices. There will be AirGroup functionality in the base code. CP will allow 
dynamic setup such as an AppleTV in a dorm room where only the student who owns 
it should have access to it.


Tim Cappalli, ACMP CCNA | (802) 626-6456
Office of Information Technology (OIT) | Lyndon
 cappa...@lyndonstate.edumailto:cappa...@lyndonstate.edu | 
 oit.lyndonstate.eduhttp://it.lyndonstate.edu/

[cid:image001.png@01CD3F0C.8122A060]http://facebook.com/LyndonOIT[cid:image002.png@01CD3F0C.8122A060]http://twitter.com/#!/LyndonOIT[cid:image003.png@01CD3F0C.8122A060]http://gplus.to/LyndonOIT

From: The EDUCAUSE Wireless Issues Constituent Group Listserv 
[mailto:WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU] On Behalf Of James Andrewartha
Sent: Thursday, May 31, 2012 8:47 AM
To: WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU
Subject: Re: [WIRELESS-LAN] Location Based Printing

I think Aruba's AirGroup will be interesting too when it is finally released. 
It is currently in alpha status, I believe. According to their tech brief
http://www.arubanetworks.com/pdf/technology/TB_AirGroupWLANServices.pdf
it appears Aruba is initially planning on using AP association for determining 
location. Perhaps they can incorporate their AP grouping feature so this would 
work better in dense environments.
At Liberty University, we are an all-Cisco shop but we have found Aruba's 
wireless products to be more feature rich and less expensive that Cisco's 
offerings. We have also found Aruba's technical support to be exceptional, 
especially when compared to our Cisco support experiences with their fat APs.
Reading the tech brief, it uses Clear Pass policy manager (previously Avenda 
eTIPS), so you could probably do something similar with Cisco ISE or Enterasys 
policy manager with some hackery. Obviously a well-engineerd product beats 
general hacks any day.

--
James Andrewartha
Network  Projects Engineer
Christ Church Grammar School
Claremont, Western Australia
Ph. (08) 9442 1757
Mob. 0424 160 877
** Participation and subscription information for this EDUCAUSE 
Constituent Group discussion list can be found at 
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**
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RE: gaming consoles

2012-05-17 Thread Cappalli, Tim G @ LSC-OIT
We allow all game systems on our open SSID with the exception of Wii (we 
removed the 1 and 2 rates). Starting in the fall, we will be providing wired 
ports by request only.

We use a combination of DHCP fingerprinting and MAC OUI prefixes to assign game 
systems to a gaming role and VLAN.


Tim Cappalli, ACMP CCNA | (802) 626-6456
Office of Information Technology (OIT) | Lyndon
 cappa...@lyndonstate.edumailto:cappa...@lyndonstate.edu | 
 oit.lyndonstate.eduhttp://it.lyndonstate.edu/

[cid:image001.png@01CD343C.30813A70]http://facebook.com/LyndonOIT[cid:image002.png@01CD343C.30813A70]http://twitter.com/#!/LyndonOIT[cid:image003.png@01CD343C.30813A70]http://gplus.to/LyndonOIT

From: The EDUCAUSE Wireless Issues Constituent Group Listserv 
[mailto:WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU] On Behalf Of Kellogg, Brian D.
Sent: Thursday, May 17, 2012 2:35 PM
To: WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU
Subject: [WIRELESS-LAN] gaming consoles

We'll be moving to an Aruba wireless solution this summer which will give us a 
lot of capabilities we haven't had.  One of the objectives is to allow gaming 
consoles on the wireless network in order to eventually remove wired ports from 
the dorms.

Has anyone put together some information on what is needed to get the consoles 
on the WLAN that would be will to share it?  I believe the Wii may require 
1Mbps and 2Mbps (which obviously sucks for dense deployments).  Wondering if 
this is true and what other caveats there may be with other consoles that 
others have come across.

Thanks,
Brian
** Participation and subscription information for this EDUCAUSE 
Constituent Group discussion list can be found at 
http://www.educause.edu/groups/.

**
Participation and subscription information for this EDUCAUSE Constituent Group 
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