At my campus, the use of personal routers was inversely proportionate to the 
density of our wireless deployment and ability to support consumer devices. 
That is, as we moved to a dense deployment of wireless, the fewer and fewer 
routers in our residential areas. Also, as we’ve leveraged Cisco’s various 
innovations e.g. Bonjour management, including location aware support, it’s way 
easier to support stuff like AppleTV and Chromecast.

This goes back to what I’ve said before. If you can get your enterprise wifi to 
look and act more like the residential (home) wifi, the less likely you are to 
have these problems.

Jeff

From: "[email protected]" <[email protected]> 
on behalf of Tim Tyler <[email protected]>
Reply-To: "[email protected]" 
<[email protected]>
Date: Friday, June 24, 2016 at 11:48 AM
To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
Subject: [WIRELESS-LAN] student residential routers?

Wireless-lan members,

Ok, I am curious as to what your opinions are on allowing students to have 
their own wireless routers in residential buildings (dorms).   While we have a 
policy that we don’t allow them, it is extremely difficult and time-consuming 
to stop them.  The two main points seem to be:

Consumes more over-head of available frequency bandwidth.

Less secure.

The 5.0ghz radios have so many more channels now.  So is this bandwidth 
consumption and efficiency still a major concern for many of you?   I know this 
was most certainly a critical issue for the 2.4ghz radios with only 3 channels, 
but my stats are showing that 2/3rds of our clients now connect to the 5.0ghz 
radio.   AC allows for much better density.  So is the additional over-head of 
additional SSID broadcasts still a big issue?   If so, are there any articles 
talking about this with regard to 5.0ghz technology?

As far as security is concerned, it just seems to me that keeping the enemy out 
of our networks was a lost cause a long time ago.  I don’t even trust my 
fac/staff subnets let alone student ones.  I know that residential style 
routers are not secure, but I have to wonder how significant this issue is.   
After all, one is only gaining access to the network.  Nothing sensitive at 
this stage has been compromised yet.  I wonder if this is a marginal issue 
given how often hackers gain access to computers inside networks anyways.

I am really curious as to what many of you think about this.  Do you have 
policy to not allow student routers?  Do you put in effort to suppress student 
router deployment?

Tim Tyler
Network Engineer
Beloit College

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