Hi James,

You are right it doesn't do mirroring as such for IOS.  The mersive guys are 
pretty helpful, if you are interested it would be worth having a chat with them 
anyway, they might be pushing for such a feature in the future.  

As you say ultimately it's about choosing something that fits your 
requirements, IOS mirroring wasn't on our list as required but certainly nice 
to have... I'm sure it's only a matter of time until the requests pour in.  I 
believe we are also looking at a couple of AB tutor licenses, don't know if 
this has anything of use https://abtutor.com/ios_features

Regards

Jason

--
Jason Cook
The University of Adelaide, AUSTRALIA 5005
Ph    : +61 8 8313 4800
e-mail: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>


-----Original Message-----
From: The EDUCAUSE Wireless Issues Constituent Group Listserv 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of James Andrewartha
Sent: Thursday, 16 January 2014 2:54 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [WIRELESS-LAN] Apple TV display mirroring spectrum use in HD wifi

Hi Lee,

On 16/01/14 12:07, Lee H Badman wrote:
> Not sure what you're looking at, but AppleTV has nothing to do with Mersive. 
> I'm not trying to sell their stuff, just quite fond of it after the 
> frustrations of what the network needs to have done to it (bigger networks 
> are worse) for AppleTV.

I was looking at the Solstice datasheet [1] which seems to indicate it doesn't 
do AirPlay on its own.

> I see TCO of AppleTV as $99 (for AppleTV) + lots of hours dorking with the 
> network + lots of support issues when it becomes a service so relied on that 
> it simply can't tolerate almost-guaranteed disruption/unpredictability + time 
> spent trying to accommodate non-Apple devices = AppleTV actually costs 
> hundreds (or thousands) of dollars and leaves you with a network you'd 
> probably prefer not to have, and a fragmented "what device can do what" 
> environment for diplay mirroring.

Absolutely, you have to determine whether it's worth it, for Apple TVs or 
Solstice. I'm just trying to determine feature compatibility - from what I can 
tell, the Solstice app [1] can only play media files or view webpages, it's not 
true iOS display mirroring and so doesn't solve the "what device can do what" 
environment. Perhaps that's all your classes need, but not being able to mirror 
other iOS apps makes it a non-starter for our requirements.

> I like the Mersive paradigm as an alternative- it asks nothing of the 
> network. Although I'd still like to see Apple fix their own limitations.

Sure, I wish you could drop Apple TVs into a directory like printers (though 
AirPrint indicates that's going away too) and just choose from a list. 
Actually, you can with the latest MDM stuff [3], but then you're having to push 
configuration to the device. Bonjour even supports wide-area DNS-SD, just the 
Apple TV doesn't for what appears to be pandering to big content.

[1]
http://www.mersive.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/Solstice-data-sheet.pdf
[2] https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/solstice-client/id604298374?mt=8
[3]
http://help.apple.com/profilemanager/mac/3.0/#apd621BA9DF-4301-4D76-8A90-84E05E343FFA

--
James Andrewartha
Network & Projects Engineer
Christ Church Grammar School
Claremont, Western Australia
Ph. (08) 9442 1757
Mob. 0424 160 877

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