Actually, in 2006 – 2008 when we were evaluating Wi-F vendors, we were moving 
away from 802.11g fat APs.

We were looking mainly at 802.11a/b/g APs. Somebody internally who could help 
the project was sold on 802.11n so that is what we purchased. Needless to say, 
we have not regretted that decision.

​​​​​

Bruce Osborne
Wireless Engineer
IT Network Oprations - Wireless

(434) 592-4229

LIBERTY UNIVERSITY
Training Champions for Christ since 1971

From: Jeffrey D. Sessler [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, August 5, 2016 12:01 PM
Subject: Re: Outsourced ResNet

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]<mailto:[email protected]>" 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> 
on behalf of James Andrewartha 
<[email protected]<mailto:[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.

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