Saw these guys at Educause...interesting technology...they had dual gigabit 
ethernet uplinks with a/b/g upgradeable to n antennas. The interesting part is 
they put around 16 antennas into one AP. 

http://www.xirrus.com/



  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Nathan Hay 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Thursday, November 01, 2007 9:39 AM
  Subject: Re: [WIRELESS-LAN] Innovative technologies


  Mark,

  I just stumbled across the mention of a company named Extricom in the October 
29, 2007 issue of Information Week.  In the article, "The n Factor" by Dave 
Molta he says "Vendors like Meru and Extricom, which employ sophisticated 
scheduling algorithms to allocate capacity to clients..."

  I've never heard of this company before, but apparently they are doing 
something innovative like Meru.  Has anyone heard anything about them?  Their 
website is http://www.extricom.com

  Nathan





  Nathan P. Hay
  Network Engineer
  Computer Services
  Cedarville University
  www.cedarville.edu 

  >>> Mark Berman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 10/29/2007 4:23 PM >>>
  Hi all,


  We are using Cisco's WCS and controller infrastructure for our wireless LAN. 
We've had a number of frustrations with it (most of which have been documented 
on this list by one or another of you all). We are a small school with limited 
staff and are finding that managing the Airespace (I mean Cisco) wireless 
system is taking more staff time than we anticipated. 


  So: With the upcoming advent of 802.11n, which would require replacing all 
our APs, we are taking the opportunity to revisit our choice of platform. The 
second place vendor response to our RFP a few years ago was Meru. I was very 
impressed with their technology but unsure of their longevity as a company. Now 
they seem to be doing very well and are doing cool things with 11n as well as 
the older standards.


  I have two questions:


  1) Does anyone know of anyone other than Meru that's doing anything 
innovative with enterprise wireless? (My take is that Cisco, Aruba, Chantry, 
Trapeze, etc. are basically the same technology with slightly different 
feature-sets and interface).


  2) Does anyone using Meru have anything negative to say about them? I've 
talked to several campuses using Meru and they all seem very happy. Somebody 
must have had a bad experience! What technological gotchas have you run into? 
What didn't pan out the way you expected from the sales hype?


  Thanks,


  - Mark

  --
  Mark Berman, Director for Networks & Systems
  Williams College, OIT, Jesup Hall
  Williamstown, MA. 01267 413-597-2092




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