Speaking only for me and not on behalf of my institution- I have heard enough 
first-hand narrative from students to have come to the belief that many 
printers that come to the dorms don't even get used, or get used until the ink 
cartridge runs out and then gets abandoned. Often, students have no clue about 
public printers until they are here for a bit (we tell them in the welcome 
packets, but you know how that can go).

For the sake of WLAN performance, I'd like to make shared printers more 
plentiful and with generous quotas- along with going ever more paperless in 
classes. Wouldn't it be great to say "and you don't need a printer!"

(And I'd like a pony.)

 
 


-----Original Message-----
From: The EDUCAUSE Wireless Issues Constituent Group Listserv 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Tom O'Donnell
Sent: Tuesday, October 30, 2012 2:53 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [WIRELESS-LAN] wireless printers in dorms

I was wondering how other schools handle wireless printers in the
dorms.  This seems to be the year everyone showed up with one, and
they're causing connectivity problems in our 2.4GHz space. Are you
able to keep them under control, or do you seek them out and make
students to turn them off?

They seem to push our AP's to other channels (usually to 1 and 11,
since it looks like the printers often use ch 6) to prevent co-channel
interference. But sometimes several adjacent AP's end up on the same
channel, so either there's still co-channel interference or they're
powered down so much that either way it can cause problems through a
whole building.

Our infrastructure is all Cisco: a WiSM running 7.0.230.0 managing a
mix of AP1252's and AP1231's.  The AP's have been better at assigning
2.4GHZ channels since we unchecked "Avoid Foreign AP interference" in
DCA settings. Our DCA Channel Sensitivity is Medium, and our TPC
settings are max. 30dMb, min. -10dBm, threshold -70dBm.  We have
Client Band Select on, but most of our clients stick with 2.4Ghz, even
where 5GHz is available.

We've seen noticeable improvement when we're able to locate an
interfering printer, disable its wireless, and change channels, but
it's a lot of work and not always successful.  Lots of knocking on
doors, some printers don't seem to let you disable wireless, and
sometimes DCA doesn't seem to spread them back among all 3 channels,
so we end up setting some channels manually.

Are there other useful settings in the WiSM? Any other ideas?

Thanks,

----------------------------------------------------------
Tom O'Donnell
Senior Manager of Network and Server Systems
Information Technology Services
University of Maine at Farmington
(207) 778-7336

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