On 12/12/2013 5:11 PM, Ian McDonald wrote:
> It seems to me to be completely impractical from a planning and
> budgetary perspective to be increasing the density of AP's on an
> annual basis due to poor client design, whether low transmit power,
> antenna deficiency, or insufficiently well designed front-ends.
>
> If a device can't connect to the same wireless network, side by side
> with last year's device, then from my perspective, that's an issue
> with the device, not an infrastructure issue.

Well, when most of us started wireless deployment, it was pretty
optimistic to plan for a laptop per student / class seat / dorm bed,
this was the same time we were doing ResNet plans with a "port per
pillow" -- a plan which game consoles initially wrecked, now followed by
BluRays and Smart TVs and femtocells and who-knows-what-else.  And now
for wireless, it's certainly not just laptops (we have more
registered/identified BYODs than computers now).

Wireless devices continue to explode...  its not last year's device that
can't necessarily communicate, it's the 3-4 extras today over the
original device that cause the issues.  If you designed for 2.4G
power/distance back when 2.4G was in vogue, and 5G was either ancient
(11a) or new again (11n), it wasn't necessarily a design goal, and 5G
doesn't tolerate walls, etc as well.  Not sure about 11ac, but 11ad at
even higher frequencies will penetrate even less.

So yeah, if we had to do it over again AND knew what we know today...
sure.  How many deployed 11a/b/g over 100Mb ports?  And out of those,
how many were Cat6/6A?  Regretting any of those decisions yet?  Just
give it time :)

Things evolve.  I'd agree they should last longer than "last year" but
things change *fast* in this business :)

Jeff

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