Without doing a google on airopeek nx (which I thought was just a packet sniffer), how does it compare with the RF Director (which is an automatic-self adjusting-site survey tool)??

 

Sully

 

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Chris Chance
Sent: Thursday, August 21, 2003 6:46 PM
To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
Subject: RE: [smartBridges] OT: May be suggestion for sB

 

I gots airopeek nx but looks like interesting apps

 


From: The Wirefree Network [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, August 21, 2003 3:25 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

 

Very interesting read below-don't look at the suggested pricing though!!

 

http://www.arubanetworks.com/news/viewrelease.php?d=20030811-1

 

Sully

 

 

 

Today's focus:  WLAN deployment shortcuts

 

By Joanie Wexler

 

The newer, so-called "thin" wireless LAN architectures use

centralized appliances to automate network configuration,

calibration, air-traffic monitoring and access point (AP)

management. They aim to reduce the RF-specific expertise

required of IT staffs and make wireless networks scalable enough

to be deployed across large organizations.

 

Aruba Wireless Networks, for example, recently announced an RF

monitoring framework called RF Director, into which it is

plugging automated RF software tools of its own and from third

parties. Meanwhile, Aruba's APs can function as a

network-connection point or as an RF monitor for scanning the

airwaves for rogue APs or spoofed packets.

 

These are among the capabilities sought by Johnson & Wales

University (JWU), discussed last time, when it settled on the

Aruba architecture for its new Denver campus WLAN, slated for

completion by the end of September.

 

For setup, the university used Aruba's RF Director product to

import AutoCAD drawings of its Denver site. "The tools

auto-selected where to place APs, what channels to use and the

output strength of each," explains Joshua Wright, senior network

and security architect at JWU.

 

"This tool became our site survey," he says.

 

Wright says that once the devices were installed (by the

university's cabling contractor), he issued a "recalibrate"

command, which causes each switch to reconfigure each AP for

optimal coverage and power output. And as network utilization

and RF barriers change, the same command tells APs to adjust

power according to the altered environment.

 

He also liked the fact that the Aruba 50 can function as either

an AP or an air monitor. "If an AP fails, [a device configured

as an air monitor] can take over almost instantly. This provides

enhanced reliability without spending money on redundant

equipment that doesn't get used most of the time," Wright says.

 

For security, JWU didn't want to have to touch all the disparate

student client devices. Aruba has a VPN LaunchPad capability

that downloads an IPSec client, license-free, to each user's

client upon initial logon.

Reply via email to