Hi all,

I am new to this group. I hope you are all doing well.  I work for TEKsystems 
in Raleigh, NC as an IT recruiter and would love to network with anyone 
interested in hearing about new job opportunities. I currently have a position 
available at Cisco in RTP as a wireless LAN engineer. If you or anyone you know 
are interested in hearing more, please feel free to send me your resume and I 
will contact you asap.

Thanks in advance for your time.
The position is a long term contract!!
Job Description:

We are looking for a person to join the wireless lan team to respond to cases 
as they come in. Will be given easier tasks first to learn the process and as 
they get more comfortable will be given harder cases. The manager expects 
individual to be handling cases on their own within a month of starting. Must 
have hands on experience with wireless access points and controllers. Person 
needs to have hands on experience supporting this type of wireless lan 
products, devices, and technologies. Person will interact with various groups 
such as the service team, sales engineers, and other engineering teams. Great 
customer service skills are extremely important to the team, so they must be 
well spoken. Will be required to determine root cause and resolution for 
previously unknown problems. Will be expected to go above and beyond to learn 
the products they are supporting and also share with the rest of the team.

Additional Job Info:

These are all of the products, devices and technologies that are being 
supported on this escalation team: Wireless Access Points * Wireless Client 
Association * Wireless Controllers * CSMA/CA, RTS, CTS protocols * RF 
transmission * Antennas * IEEE 802.11 standards (a,b,g), 802.1x Wi-Fi * 802.1Q 
Trunking * Ether channel * Strong understanding of LAN Switching technologies 
(VLAN's) * WLAN Security in the areas of authentication, encryption, IDS/IPS 
using Radius, AAA authentication, EAP, LEAP, PEAP, PSK * AES-CCMP encryption 
(AES- Counter w. CBC MAC Protocol) * Wireless Sniffers * WEP encryption (Wired 
Equivalent Privacy * WPA (Wi-Fi Protocol Access), WPA2 * Cisco LWAPP and IOS 
based solutions * WLSM, WiSM, WCS




Top 3 Skills (stack ranked) :

1-IEEE 802.11 standards (a,b,g) 802.1x wi-fi, 2-wireless access points, 
3-wireless client association



Mike Robinson Technical Recruiter
1201 Edwards Mill Rd Suite 201, Raleigh, NC 27607
Office: (919) 816-1518
Cell: (704) 798-6887
[cid:[email protected]]<http://www.teksystems.com/>







From: The EDUCAUSE Wireless Issues Constituent Group Listserv 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Lawrence, Bill
Sent: Thursday, December 02, 2010 3:25 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [WIRELESS-LAN] Mount hidden or in plain view in dorms?

We've mounted them below the ceiling from the very first installations with the 
exceptions of some access points serving antennas on the building exterior.

We have experienced less than six stolen access points in roughly 10 years. I 
don't recall any units actually being vandalized.

We did have some folks in our Facilities department express concerns with 
aesthetics of access points below the ceiling in the early days, but they have 
come to realize that the access points tend to blend in with the exit signs, 
smoke detectors, etc. after a short period of time. We do try to use access 
points with built in antennas e.g. Cisco 1142, where possible.

--------------------------------------------------------------
Bill Lawrence RCDD, NTS, WD
Georgia Institute of Technology
Office of Information Technology
258 4th Street NW
Atlanta, GA 30332
Ph: 404-894-9504
Fax: 404-894-3599

From: The EDUCAUSE Wireless Issues Constituent Group Listserv 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Fleming, Tony
Sent: Thursday, December 02, 2010 2:33 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [WIRELESS-LAN] Mount hidden or in plain view in dorms?

Crew,
We hide our access points above ceiling grids. Our logic is the devices are out 
of site and less prone to vandalism (in fact we have had zero vandalism).
One concern that has been expressed by our wireless team is the congestion 
above the ceiling grid - pipes, HVAC ducting, lighting and cables. It is 
logical that all of these obstructions do not help RF propagation and create 
sources of interference.

My question for you guys:
Did any of you change your mounting locations from above ceiling grid to below 
the grid (visible)?
                Did you notice substantial signal improvement?
                What is the vandalism rate?
                Did your facilities/administrative folks express any concerns 
about the AP visibility?


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