For what it is worth... running a successful WISP will require a certain
level of technical expertise and probably a "coder".  

Anyone can throw up a simple access point with a tall antenna and connect it
to a LAN, but to grow and reach any sizeable market, you are going to need
someone that knows how to configure routing between access points and that
will look a lot like "coding".

Additionally, you will learn that with most solutions, access control,
network monitoring and bandwidth management all require some "coding".
Very few out-of-the-box solutions exist that provide for all of these
aspects of WISP operation.

Regards,
Larry Yunker


-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On
Behalf Of Liam Cummings
Sent: Monday, April 26, 2010 5:50 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [WISPA] New WISP

Hi all,

We are a technologies solutions company located in Cincinnati and trying
to become a WISP. We are running into two road blocks. 

1 - We need to choose software that doesn't need a coder to operate

2 - Choosing the right access points and other equipment

 

We would love to here your thoughts.

 

Any input would be much appreciated! :-)

 



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