I sort of "missed my conclusion"... so my apologies, let me add that part...

On 3/17/2014 11:04 PM, Jeff Kell wrote:
> Well, some client drivers will let you tweak the "advanced" settings.
> I know I can "prefer 5Ghz" and I can "prefer N" on my aging laptop
> (yeah, it was my Dell below, trying to track a client issue back to
> the wiring closet where we hung a leftover Aruba AP65 (a/b/g only),
> and my own freaking laptop was hanging on to an "n" on a floor below).
> It also appears that iOS 7.1 update changed the "captive portal
> detection" on Apple devices... so if you're having issues with your
> "registration portal" for new devices, you might double-check their
> captive portal site check.

I suppose you can provide the "option" for user-selectable advanced
settings (perfer 5Ghz, perfer N, turn off wireless upon wired connect,
etc) all have their benefits, but also mean that any user that can find
the right buttons can shoot themselves in the foot :)

And when the vendors make less than ideal choices (if Apple is "choosing
5G" or "choosing "n" or "ac" if available) it shoots many of their users
in the foot. 

That would clearly be a design decision that nobody can really
universally be happy about (just look at Bonjour, mDNS, AppleTV, etc...
fine for home, lousy for campus/enterprise).

As personal (BYOD) things continue to grow in popularity, we need to
EXPECT them to be optimized for home use.  I suppose not until the
density of these devices get to the point where apartment neighbors are
fighting with each other by pushing content to the other's AppleTVs...
and we have some controversy / conflict / court cases, they're not going
to get the hint either :(

There is no "universally" predictable model to follow, but (hint,
hint...) if you have authenticated to a wireless network via
802.1X/WPA2/Enterprise, hey, you're probably not in somebody's house :)

Waiting on DHCP options to support some of these ideas... assuming they
would be supported afterward (e.g., DNS suffix search list finally
approved, and still not accepted by any windows clients).  But oh wait,
DHCP... in IPv6 days?  What WAS I thinking of...  :)

Jeff
Jeff

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