Scriv,
Wouldn't think of leavin' - it's good to be back in touch again.
jack
John Scrivner wrote:
WOW! Boggs is here! And Victoria! and Jack Unger! What happened? I went
to Argentina and you guys all came to WISPA to hang out? I guess I need
to run off to the other side of the planet more o
Jeromie,
You raise some good points... and here are some more differences between
Matt's fully-meshed WIRED network example and the real-world conditions
under which WIRELESS mesh networks are so often deployed today.
1) REROUTING - Only a node failure or a high peak traffic load would
norma
My example used wireless P2P links, which has no inherent weakness over
fiber P2P links from a topology point-of-view. It would appear you are
falling into the same trap as others by forcing mesh to be something it
is not. Mesh is just a network topology; no more, no less. Sure it is
possible t
There is a very big difference from fiber mesh and wireless mesh.
Wireless is classicly a bunch of HDX links
where fiber is PtP links. Your example doesnt make it clear that the
difference is what cause's 802.11[a|b|g]
mesh "suck" and fiber/copper mesh's "not suck". The solution is multi
radio u
WOW! Boggs is here! And Victoria! and Jack Unger! What happened? I went
to Argentina and you guys all came to WISPA to hang out? I guess I need
to run off to the other side of the planet more often. Now don't leave
just cause I am back OK!
:-)
Welcome gang. Glad to see all of you.
Scriv
Roge
I used street pricing for the radios in question, but certainly didn't
cover pricing on any other items that would be required. Coverage area
wasn't taken into consideration as it has no bearing on topology.
-Matt
Dawn wrote:
Matt,
Are these actual costs?
What is the coverage area?
Thanks,
Matt,
Are these actual costs?
What is the coverage area?
Thanks,
Dawn
Matt Liotta wrote:
Attached is a quick rundown of basic mesh theory that I put together
in light of the recent thread. It hasn't been peer reviewed or edited,
which I would normally do before sharing publicly. But since I
We have a couple of legacy Quick Bridge links that die simultaneously
for no apparent reason. All are 5.8, two different locations, different
Vlans. When we reboot them, the radios come back, slowly reestablish a
link but show no activity on the Ethernet side. Its happened twice and
has us scr
It didn't attach correctly.
DSJ
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Matt Liotta
Sent: Sunday, February 26, 2006 6:47 PM
To: WISPA General List
Subject: Re: [WISPA] Basic Mesh Theory
The file is attached as RTF.
-Matt
Dustin Jurman wrote:
>
The file is attached as RTF.
-Matt
Dustin Jurman wrote:
Hey Matt,
It would be nice to see this in a word document or Text based so one
could add comments to your work.
DSJ
*From:* [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailt
Hey Matt,
It would be nice to see this in a word
document or Text based so one could add comments to your work.
DSJ
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf
Of Matt Liotta
Sent: Sunday, February 26, 2006
2:56 PM
To: WISPA
General List
Subject: [WISP
The internet is the largest mesh network in operation today. However,
there is no comparison to internet routing and redundancy to that of
private network routing and redundancy. The internet is so huge that
smart routing decisions can only be made at the edge. With a private
network, the size
I haven't read your summary yet, but would like to chime in a bit on Mesh...
When the DoD developed TCP/IP, they built it to be robust under war-time
conditions. This means fault tolerant, rerouting, change-over, change-back.
It would wonderful to hear the Mesh scientists (not sales people)
d
please cancel my subscription.
Thank You.
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Here in Atlanta, Metrocom reported that it took 4 times the average
number of nodes to provide coverage. Technology has changed a good deal
since then, but then again they were also using 900Mhz, which has a lot
more success with our pine trees than 2.4Ghz.
-Matt
Brad Larson wrote:
BTW, thi
BTW, this is what gets lots of people in trouble. Quoting 16-18 mesh nodes
per square mile may be a correct number in AZ or TX. You may need 3 times
that in my neck of the woods here in NE USA. Even more where interference
shrinks cell sizes. Be cautious John. Brad
-Original Message-
Fro
The switch I am looking to replace is at my core, tying my APs together,
and to the main router.
The one I am looking at/leaning to is the Dell Powerconnect 2708. Its
Web manageable, and has some pretty impressive features, including
broadcast storm control VLan tagging, and port mirroring. Pr
Try ebay, I found 10 3COM - 3c-905's for $36 including shipping, I think they are unbeatable.
-Original Message-From: Jenco Wireless [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]Sent: Saturday, February 25, 2006 12:05 AMTo: 'WISPA General List'Subject: Re: [WISPA] Best Network Card
Anyone have a good source fo
This thread is now closed. These personal
attacks on Mr. Thomas are uncalled for. We insist on more professional
decorum. Any more attacks like this one will result in a list suspension.
Some of you read a lot more into Mr. Thomas’s post than I think he intended.
This behaviior is ridi
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