But that doc says it "uses the WiFi (sic) radio already in your Intel vPro 
platform". In other words, it uses the Wi-Fi NIC on the client.

I have seen many Miracast / WiDi devices in 2.4 GHZ. It appears Intel is 
restricting their implementation .

 
Bruce Osborne
Wireless Engineer
IT Infrastructure & Media Solutions
 
(434) 592-4229
 
LIBERTY UNIVERSITY
Training Champions for Christ since 1971

-----Original Message-----
From: Julian Y Koh [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Thursday, October 29, 2015 7:40 AM
Subject: Re: Desktop projection to classroom display

On Wed Oct 28 2015 19:26:05 CDT, Justin Dover <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> IT does require a good wireless network because WiDi piggy backs on your 
> wireless routers.

??  Maybe I'm not understanding things, but I thought that WiDi didn't use your 
Wi-Fi access points.

<https://www-ssl.intel.com/content/dam/www/public/us/en/documents/white-papers/pro-wireless-display-white-paper.pdf>
 talks about how WiDi was designed to avoid overlap with enterprise wireless 
network channel usage by avoiding the DFS channels at least, but it still 
doesn't prevent random users from setting these things up and inadvertently 
setting them to a non-DFS channel that is already in use.


--
Julian Y. Koh
Associate Director, Telecommunications and Network Services Northwestern 
Information Technology

2001 Sheridan Road #G-166
Evanston, IL 60208
847-467-5780
NUIT Web Site: <http://www.it.northwestern.edu/> PGP Public 
Key:<http://bt.ittns.northwestern.edu/julian/pgppubkey.html>

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