I haven’t read the whole thread, but just in case this wasn’t mentioned, DFS 
channels factor into this decision.  Some clients don’t support any or all 
DFS channels.  If those can fail over to 2.4, then DFS channel use if very 
practical.  If they can’t, you must be far more discriminate with your DFS 
channel use.



From: The EDUCAUSE Wireless Issues Constituent Group Listserv 
[mailto:WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU] On Behalf Of Osborne, Bruce W 
(Network Services)
Sent: Thursday, April 07, 2016 12:07 PM
To: WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU
Subject: Re: [WIRELESS-LAN] Turning off 2.4 on a select SSID?



B-G-N is 2.4 only, by definition. AC must support 5-Gig



​​​​​You have been away from the wireless world for too long.   :D



Bruce Osborne

Wireless Engineer

IT Network Services - Wireless



(434) 592-4229



LIBERTY UNIVERSITY

Training Champions for Christ since 1971



From: Philippe Hanset [mailto:phan...@anyroam.net]
Sent: Thursday, April 7, 2016 10:37 AM
Subject: Re: Turning off 2.4 on a select SSID?



My ears have been burning…



I understand Hector's comment about the spirit of eduroam, but like Ryan I 
have also be tempted in the past to only support 5 GHz in certain areas

because 2.4 GHz was becoming too much of a pain (e.g. Dormitories).  The 
eduroam Compliance Statement requires 802.11, no frequency mentioned.



eduroam users with 2.4GHz devices will just not see the available SSID if a 
school decides to only offer it at 5 GHz in certain locations.

In a sense it is no different than schools only offering eduroam in certain 
locations.



Now, if the entire eduroam SSID for all locations at the school is on 5 GHz, 
it might be challenging.



But how many clients REALLY can’t support 5 GHz?

The stats showing 2.4 GHz VS 5 GHz usage can be deceiving. Is it a client 
with both radios and a poor selection of spectrum,

or is it really 2.4 Ghz only capable devices? It seems that the best way to 
know if 5 GHz only is fine for your community is to “just do it”.



I checked cheap laptops at BestBuy and under specifications you find 
“Wireless-AC” or “Wireless-B, G, N". No reference to the type of radio.

Those darn marketing people, they will get you every time.



Philippe



Philippe Hanset
www.anyroam.net <http://www.anyroam.net>
www.eduroam.us <http://www.eduroam.us>
+1 (865) 236-0770

GPG key id: 0xF2636F9C







On Apr 7, 2016, at 10:04 AM, Turner, Ryan H <rhtur...@email.unc.edu 
<mailto:rhtur...@email.unc.edu> > wrote:



I don't think so.  I think anytime a university enforces a uniform policy 
that applies to all folks, it shouldn't be an issue.  Of course, we are a 
long way from actually doing this.  We'll involve Phillipe if we move 
forward.

Sent from Outlook Mobile <https://aka.ms/qtex0l>





On Thu, Apr 7, 2016 at 7:01 AM -0700, "Hector J Rios" <hr...@lsu.edu 
<mailto:hr...@lsu.edu> > wrote:

I would go back to Jason's comment and reference eduroam's policy. I 
personally think that only allowing 5GHz on eduroam goes against the spirit 
the global availability of eduroam. My 2 cents.

Hector Rios
Louisiana State University

-----Original Message-----
From: The EDUCAUSE Wireless Issues Constituent Group Listserv 
[mailto:WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU] On Behalf Of Matthew Newton
Sent: Thursday, April 07, 2016 8:54 AM
To: WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU 
<mailto:WIRELESS-LAN@listserv.educause.edu>
Subject: Re: [WIRELESS-LAN] Turning off 2.4 on a select SSID?

On Thu, Apr 07, 2016 at 01:27:04PM +0000, Joseph M. Karam wrote:
> We offer 2.4 and 5 GHz service.  When we have conflicts, we work with
> departments to give them a channel in the 2.4 GHz space, then we take
> that channel out of our central infrastructure.
> So, for example we gave engineering channel 6 for all of their labs,
> and we took that out of our central infrastructure.  So far it has
> worked well and we can play together nicely

What do you do after you've given the last remaining free 2.4Ghz channel to 
the third department that requests one and you've got none left for 
yourselves?

And presumably Engineering have lots of CCI because all of their APs are on 
the same frequency?

Not critcising, just trying to understand! :)

Matthew


--
Matthew Newton, Ph.D. <m...@le.ac.uk <mailto:m...@le.ac.uk> >

Systems Specialist, Infrastructure Services, I.T. Services, University of 
Leicester, Leicester LE1 7RH, United Kingdom

For IT help contact helpdesk extn. 2253, <ith...@le.ac.uk 
<mailto:ith...@le.ac.uk> >

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