MIT is Cisco as well, a shade under 6k APs.
On 3/31/16, 6:34 PM, "The EDUCAUSE Wireless Issues Constituent Group Listserv
on behalf of Patrick McEvilly" wrote:
>Harvard is a Cisco shop with about 6500 APs.
>
Does anyone have any experience in deploying public/municipal wireless
networks? I’d love to hear your war stories, lessons learned, etc.
Thanks!
Dave
--
David LaPorte
dlapo...@mit.edu<mailto:dlapo...@mit.edu>
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Participation and subscription information for this EDUCAUSE Const
Thanks for sharing always interesting to see this kind of information.
Wwe have some similar statistics running, so I've included a couple of
graphs of our own. Interested to know about how you do this via
detecting browser agents when looking at device type. We have been using
DHCP
I would've hoped so, but ~36% of devices fingerprinted as
iPod/iPad/iPhone didn't sent a hostname. Of those that did, ~27%
changed it from the default Apple format :(
On 04/01/11 15:47, James J J Hooper wrote:
On 01/04/2011 20:18, David LaPorte wrote:
Thanks for sharing always interesting
We're using the Cisco Guest NAC Server to provide sponsored guest access
and it's worked fine for us. It ships as an appliance.
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/ps10160/index.html
Dave
On 7/6/10 3:48 PM, Christian Heroux wrote:
Hello,
Mcgill University here in Montreal has a
list can be found at
http://www.educause.edu/groups/.
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David LaPorte | Network Services Architect | david_lapo...@harvard.edu
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Participation and subscription information for this EDUCAUSE Constituent Group
discussion list can be found at http://www.educause.edu/groups/.
the return codes and what they all meant. After a few times
of
it's up to you to program, we had to escalate the case in order to get
a
text file of the sample return codes.
- Original Message -
From: David LaPorte [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU
Sent
page on the WLAN portion of the
controller. I can do it from the router, but it it a little bit too
cumbersome. I wanted to know if there was a way to get the WLAN to do
it. Thanks.
Jorge Bodden
--
David LaPorte, CISSP, CCNP
Security Manager, Network and Server Systems
Harvard University