RE: [WIRELESS-LAN] Betr.: [WIRELESS-LAN] Gigabit Wi-Fi

2012-01-11 Thread Hector J Rios
You got it right Lee. The higher speeds will not necessarily be of use for us in the higher ed sector (yet... you never know), although it will be nice to simply have the capability in those special cases where they could be used. For now the one advantage that Gigabit Wi-Fi will provide will

Re: [WIRELESS-LAN] Betr.: [WIRELESS-LAN] Gigabit Wi-Fi

2012-01-11 Thread Mike King
I can't find the direct quote. I can find the mission statement that is directly related to it: http://www.google.com/fiber/kansascity/about.html But a project manager invovled with the Google Fiber Project (Gigabit access to the home in Kansas City) had a quote along the lines of: When

RE: [WIRELESS-LAN] Betr.: [WIRELESS-LAN] Gigabit Wi-Fi

2012-01-11 Thread Jennings, Zachariah E.
To: WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU Subject: Re: [WIRELESS-LAN] Betr.: [WIRELESS-LAN] Gigabit Wi-Fi I can't find the direct quote. I can find the mission statement that is directly related to it: http://www.google.com/fiber/kansascity/about.html But a project manager invovled with the Google Fiber

RE: [WIRELESS-LAN] Betr.: [WIRELESS-LAN] Gigabit Wi-Fi

2012-01-11 Thread Andy Voelker
Of Jeffrey Sessler Sent: Wednesday, January 11, 2012 3:04 PM To: WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU Subject: Re: [WIRELESS-LAN] Betr.: [WIRELESS-LAN] Gigabit Wi-Fi An auditorium with an 8-antenna 802.11ac AP running a 160Mhz channel, with nearly 7Gbps aggregate bandwidth, sounds pretty interesting