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Daly - Considerations for High-Density WLAN Deployments - 1.16.13

Wi-Fi networks are seeing increased utilization and load across organizations in most
industries. High-density wireless networks are typically considered to be environments
where the number of client devices and required application throughput exceed the
available capacity of a traditional “coverage-oriented” Wi-Fi network design. In
these situations, even a well-designed wireless network that provides coverage at
good signal strength and SNR (signal-to-noise ratio) throughout the desired coverage
area is insufficient to ensure high performance due to inadequate capacity. The
limiting factor is available airtime. Since Wi-Fi relies on a shared and unbounded
medium (that is, the air), clients and access points must contend for available airtime
to transmit data.

This presentation outlines a set of simple principles that you can use as a basic guide
when designing your high-density network. This list of principles is not meant to be
comprehensive but rather a quick overview of the most important items to take into
account.

Speakers

Olav Jensen, Regional Sales Manager
Mid-Atlantic Area, Aerohive Networks

Jim Rowland, Senior System Architect and Project Manager
Daly Computers, Inc.

Please register before Tuesday, January 15th, 2012, 12:00 noon

Posted by Tamara Petronka on January 4, 2013 3:45 PM |

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