While we didn't have the chance to do as in-depth in testing we also looked at 
Meraki but ended up going with Aruba. The Aruba solution for us was cheaper, 
offers more features (the vlan tunneling and bridging options), and ended up 
being more secure with regards to packet captures.



Patrick Goggins
Network Administrator
Carroll University



-----Original Message-----
From: The EDUCAUSE Wireless Issues Constituent Group Listserv 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Ethan Sommer
Sent: Wednesday, August 11, 2010 2:45 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [WIRELESS-LAN] Meraki?

We tried out Meraki, and wound up going with Aruba.

Meraki Pros:
* MUCH easier to use.
* Possibly better coverage?
* The Aruba 105 ceiling mount design is really annoying. With meraki you 
can just hang them on the wall with screws.
* Their techs (once you convince them you actually have a problem) can 
go into your system and diagnose and fix the problem for you.
* There is no controller to purchase, so the cost scales linearly with 
the number of APs. (the 65th ap isn't $10k)

Meraki Cons:
* We saw about a 40-50% increase in throughput using Aruba close to the 
access points. (I could transfer about 11MBytes/second over 5Ghz N with 
Meraki vs 19MBytes/second with Aruba.)
* We found it a bit creepy that their techs could do packet captures of 
our network.
* The user interface is so simple it often hides parameters we'd like to 
be able to tweek (or at least try tweeking.) For example, their sales 
people said it only did 802.11G on the 2.4ghz band, but it actually did 
802.11N. We wanted to try turning it to 802.11G only and see if what the 
sales guy said about 802.11G and 802.11N interoperating was true, but 
there isn't a way to do that. I suspect that having N turned on was the 
better setting, but being who I am, I wanted to test it.
* Each AP is more expensive than an Aruba AP-105. Depending on how your 
budgets work, it might actually be easier to have a big up front cost 
and lower incremental costs.
* The ability to tunnel the traffic back to our server room and deal 
with the VLANs there was a handy Aruba feature. With Meraki, you have to 
tag the VLANs all the way out to the AP.

Ethan




On 08/11/2010 11:19 AM, Marcelo Lew wrote:
> I was wondering if somebody on the list is using (or considered) using the 
> Meraki System?
>
> Marcelo Lew
> Wireless Enterprise Administrator
> University Technology Services
> University of Denver
> Desk: (303) 871-6523
> Cell: (303) 669-4217
> Fax:  (303) 871-5900
> Email: [email protected]
>
> **********
> Participation and subscription information for this EDUCAUSE Constituent 
> Group discussion list can be found at http://www.educause.edu/groups/.
>    


-- 
Ethan Sommer
Associate Director of Core Services
Gustavus Technology Services
[email protected]
507-933-7042

**********
Participation and subscription information for this EDUCAUSE Constituent Group 
discussion list can be found at http://www.educause.edu/groups/.

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