Hello all…

Just a few thoughts on this topic. 
Wave 2 isn’t any faster than wave 1 so it doesn’t need two Eth ports etc.
Now, by true specification, yes it CAN be faster but that’s only because of 160 
MHz channelization. 
MU-MIMO just takes the same number of streams and distributes them to multiple 
clients. For example, 3 MU streams has no greater Eth load than a 3x3:3 client 
on a 3x3:3 AP. 
However, new 11ac APs are 4x4:4. So technically they can be faster. But, the 
only way that will have any effect whatsoever is if you have a 4 spatial stream 
client device. And while those will come out (if not already) most devices on 
campus are mobile, so 2 spatial stream max. MU-MIMO would then be able to send 
two, two stream transmissions. However, keep in mind that each MU-MIMO stream 
will be lowering its data rate vs. a single device. (longer discussion)
One single 1 Gbps port will take you through to 11ax. 
Wi-Fi is half duplex and Eth is full. 
I used to work for a Wi-Fi manufacturer and in any test we could throw at it, 
we couldn’t get 1 Gbps ethernet to be our bottleneck except is completely 
unrealistic environments (single direction traffic  only, 160 MHz 
channelization, 4x4:4 client etc)
Wave 1 to Wave 2 is a VERY small upgrade in the grand scheme of things. 11g to 
11n was revolutionary. 
MU-MIMO hasn’t been proven except in a lab. Yes, in perfect scenarios it can 
provide some improvement. But there is a lot of cost (overhead) in making 
MU-MIMO work. Dollar for dollar, I would only consider MU-MIMO APs in my most 
highly dense areas. And even for that I may not be convinced…
Look at individual features on wave 2 APs. 
There ARE sacrifices in new technology for sake of getting it to market. Often 
times you will see better performance from an older generation (I use 
generation loosely with 11ac W1 to W2) APs. 
Look to make sure that all performance features (ATF, band steering etc) are 
there are newer APs. Oddly enough, some features are dropped b/c programming 
those into a new chipset takes TIME.
Random thoughts
I am not saying don’t buy W2 APs. I’m saying that you shouldn’t expect the 
features in W2 to have that much of an improvement 
New chipsets are almost always better at PHY level stuff vs. older chips EVEN 
with the same specs (3x3:3, 4x4:4 etc). Chip manufacturers just get better at 
what they do. 
Don’t forget about 11ax. Its here in two years and it should have significant 
improvement for high-density (not overall, single device throughput) 
applications. Client devices will of course take some time but as someone 
mentioned, higher-ed has the fastest client adoption turnover in any vertical. 
Sorry that was such a long response. 

GT Hill

From:  The EDUCAUSE Wireless Issues Constituent Group Listserv 
<[email protected]> on behalf of Philippe Hanset 
<[email protected]>
Reply-To:  The EDUCAUSE Wireless Issues Constituent Group Listserv 
<[email protected]>
Date:  Friday, August 5, 2016 at 11:34 AM
To:  <[email protected]>
Subject:  Re: [WIRELESS-LAN] Outsourced ResNet

Brian,

Food for thoughts...

How is the over-subscription to the commodity Internet keeping up with Wi-Fi 
these days?

Most services are in the cloud and it seems that Internet Commodity could be 
the limiting factor rather than wave1 or wave2 or even staying with 802.11n.

Is it worth worrying about 802.11ac wave 1 or wave 2 when your Wi-Fi is so much 
more capable than your campus uplink?
(or is it?)

When we talked about 802.11g VS 802.11n there were huge differences between the 
two.
Is it still the case between wave 1 and wave 2?

Software support lifecycle seems to be the main determining factor in Wi-Fi 
infrastructure upgrades.
So, rather than Wave1 VS Wave2, we should maybe consider vendors with longer 
software lifecycle support.

Also, many of us upgraded from 802.11n to 802.11ac building-wide and even 
campus-wide because n and ac didn’t play well together.
How do Wave1 and Wave 2 play together?

Philippe

Philippe Hanset
www.eduroam.us
www.anyroam.net




On Aug 5, 2016, at 12:01 PM, Jeffrey D. Sessler <[email protected]> wrote:

There are few problems I see with this line of thinking.
 
a)      This is the same argument people made when 802.11n arrived i.e. Stick 
with 802.11g as it’s less expensive, proven, and there are hardly any 11n 
clients. For those of us who jumped on the cutting edge, we road an explosive 
wave of 11n clients and all the benefits of being prepared for it. Others that 
stuck to 11g no doubt regretted their decision.
b)      If there is a cost difference between Wave 1 and 2 it’s because the 
manufacture knows Wave 1 is dead, and they are more than happy to get that 
inventory cleared out. You’ve just purchased on the declining edge of that 
technology’s life-cycle.
c)      Life-cycle. If your AP life-cycle is say five years (or longer), a Wave 
1 AP is already a couple of years into its eventual EOS/EOL with the vendor. 
This means you could get four years out and it’s no longer supported by current 
controller code. By purchasing at the leading-edge, you’re many more years from 
having to deal with that scenario.
 
Jeff
 
 
From: "[email protected]" <[email protected]> 
on behalf of James Andrewartha <[email protected]>
 
Right now I would still buy mid-range Wave 1 APs, because the pricing is 
significantly cheaper, and there’s hardly any MU-MIMO clients yet, Apple 
devices in particular.
 
********** Participation and subscription information for this EDUCAUSE 
Constituent Group discussion list can be found at 
http://www.educause.edu/groups/.
On Aug 5, 2016, at 12:01 PM, Jeffrey D. Sessler <[email protected]> wrote:

There are few problems I see with this line of thinking.
 
a)      This is the same argument people made when 802.11n arrived i.e. Stick 
with 802.11g as it’s less expensive, proven, and there are hardly any 11n 
clients. For those of us who jumped on the cutting edge, we road an explosive 
wave of 11n clients and all the benefits of being prepared for it. Others that 
stuck to 11g no doubt regretted their decision.
b)      If there is a cost difference between Wave 1 and 2 it’s because the 
manufacture knows Wave 1 is dead, and they are more than happy to get that 
inventory cleared out. You’ve just purchased on the declining edge of that 
technology’s life-cycle.
c)      Life-cycle. If your AP life-cycle is say five years (or longer), a Wave 
1 AP is already a couple of years into its eventual EOS/EOL with the vendor. 
This means you could get four years out and it’s no longer supported by current 
controller code. By purchasing at the leading-edge, you’re many more years from 
having to deal with that scenario.
 
Jeff
 
 
From: "[email protected]" <[email protected]> 
on behalf of James Andrewartha <[email protected]>
 
Right now I would still buy mid-range Wave 1 APs, because the pricing is 
significantly cheaper, and there’s hardly any MU-MIMO clients yet, Apple 
devices in particular.
 
********** Participation and subscription information for this EDUCAUSE 
Constituent Group discussion list can be found at 
http://www.educause.edu/groups/.


********** Participation and subscription information for this EDUCAUSE 
Constituent Group discussion list can be found at 
http://www.educause.edu/groups/. 



**********
Participation and subscription information for this EDUCAUSE Constituent Group 
discussion list can be found at http://www.educause.edu/groups/.

Reply via email to