I am not sure what difference the "marketing perspective" would make for B or G. If a laptop of a hotel guest is G, it will certainly work on a B network. You can, market it as 802.11G compatible I guess. From a technical standpoint, unless the hotel guests need to share more than 6Mbps or so, there shouldn't be any real advantage for going "G" I don't think. Most customers just want it to work.

Sam Tetherow wrote:
I'm curious what other people are doing to light up hotels or building hotspots.

We have been using CB3s as the APs and a routerboard for the router and backhaul. But I'm curious what kinds of setups other people have been using and what their luck has been. I don't need actual hotspot functionality, but I think it would be beneficial to offer 802.11g atleast from a 'marketing' perspective.

   Sam Tetherow
   Sandhills Wireless


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