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Big WLAN on Campus By Naomi Graychase
August 15, 2008
The Washington County School District (WCSD) in Utah is delivering WLAN access to more than 22,000 students in the communities of St. George, Washington, Santa Clara, Ivins, Hurricane, LaVerkin, Dammeron Valley, Central, Veyo, Pine Valley, Leeds, Hildale, Virgin, Enterprise, Springdale, Toquerville, and Winchester Hills. Xirrus is deploying the Wi-Fi network for all 41 public k-12 schools in the district. The deployment began this spring at seven schools. We conducted substantial testing of several Wi-Fi manufacturers, but found only the Xirrus Wi-Fi Array capable of supporting the heavy loads from our wireless computer carts, said Charlie Roberts, Technology and Media Director at WCSD in a press release May 7th. We were very impressed with the user capacity and bandwidth of the Wi-Fi Arrayit is easy to install and provides the flexibility needed for our growing wireless population. Washington County's nineteen school districts were consolidated into the Washington County School District in June 1915. The district covers 2,425 square miles. ** Xirrus has announced another campus-wide deployment of its Xirrus Wi-Fi Arrays. Chapman University in Orange County, California will be deploying Wi-Fi at the Marion Knott Studios and then extending the WLAN across the entire campus. We looked at several Wi-Fi vendors, searching for a solution that could provide a pervasive and reliable connection for our more than 6,000 students in lecture halls, across open spaces, and in their living quartersalso one that could grow with us as we deployed VoIP phones and upgraded to 802.11n, said Dave Young, Director of IT at Chapman University in a press release August 6th. We tested and were amazed at the capabilities of the Xirrus Wi-Fi Array: It provided the coverage, user density, and bandwidth we needed along with a simplified central management system and was completely upgradable to 802.11ntraditional access points couldnt come close. Chapman University, founded in 1861, is one of the oldest private universities in California. Its campus is located in the heart of Orange County.
August 4, 2008 NEC Unified Solutions, a global provider of enterprise business communications solutions, has completed two major phases of its WLAN deployment for voice and data at the University of Arizona. The University, which serves more than 32,000 students in Tucson, AZ, has dubbed its network, "UAWiFi." Despite having left the hyphen out of "Wi-Fi," the network has accomplished great things. According to NEC Unified Solutions, a wholly-owned subsidiary of NEC Corporation of America, it spans more than 7 million square feet, includes 4,500 wireless access points, and covers 22 buildings. Once the final phase is completed, the deployment will include more than 6,000 access points and span 12 million square feet on two campuses. Currently, the network can see more than 19,000 WLAN devices connected at any given time and has scaled to more than 53,000 during peak times. "Access to cutting-edge technology is a key factor in attracting and retaining students at the university level," said Michele Norin, CIO for the University of Arizona in a press release. "NECs ability to manage our VoIP network turnkey, meet our aggressive deployment schedule, and install and service Cisco equipment were our deciding factors. We believe we now have a world-class secure and scalable wireless LAN-based voice and data network for use by students, faculty, staff and visitors alike." ** Pueblo School District No. 70 in Colorado has deployed a Wi-Fi network across three high schools. Equipment provider, Xirrus, estimates that it will serve more than 2,600 student and faculty wireless notebooks, handhelds, and phones. Pueblo School District No. 70 is the largest geographical school district in the state of Colorado, educating over 8,000 students across four high schools, six middle schools, 12 elementary schools, two charter schools, one alternative middle/high school, and seven pre-schools. The district has launched a 1:1 Computing Program initiative for all students and faculty, which includes wireless Internet access. We come across school districts every day who want to replace their wired connections with wireless ones as a means to increase network performance and student learning, but without the cost and hassle of legacy access points, said Chad Frisby, Regional Director at Xirrus in a press release. We delivered a Wi-Fi network at Pueblo School District No. 70 with the same quality of service as a wired network, and we did it with 96 fewer access points, 96 fewer switch ports, 1.5 fewer miles of cabling, and roughly 12,000 less kilowatt hours per year than any other Wi-Fi platform on the market today. ** Temple University is deploying a sizable new Wi-Fi network. Once completed, the network will include more than 900 APs across all eight of its Philadelphia-area campuses. The network uses equipment from Meru Networks and will combine 802.11a/b/g with some 802.11n technology. In some locations, Wi-Fi will replace wired networking altogether. The Wi-Fi network is already up and running at Temple's Law School, School of Business, and TECH (Teaching, Education,Collaboration, and Help) Center, a 75,000-square-foot technology facility housing a 700-computer lab. A pilot 802.11n network at the School of Medicine enables medical students to use high-bandwidth streaming video applications and download complex medical images to their laptops, even in packed lecture halls. Begun earlier this summer, the project is expected to be completed by year's end. ** Xirrus today announced that Pepperdine University has deployed 161 of its XS8 Wi-Fi Arrays (totaling 1,288 radios) at its Malibu, CA campus. Pepperdine is an independent Christian university with approximately 8,300 graduate and undergraduate students in five colleges and schools. Its 830-acre campus overlooks the Pacific Ocean. Westlake Village, CA-based Xirrus is known for its Wi-Fi Array, which it says obsoletes traditional Wi-Fi offerings by integrating 4, 8, or 16 radios and high-gain directional antennas into a single device along with an on-board gigabit switch, Wi-Fi controller, firewall, dedicated Wi-Fi threat sensor, and embedded spectrum analyzer, providing the performance and security to replace Ethernet workgroup switches with Wi-Fi technology. The intent of the Xirrus architecture is different from any other Wi-Fi offering, because we are focused on eliminating traditional wired Ethernet workgroup switches by replacing them with our Wi-Fi Arrays, said Dirk Gates, CEO and Founder of Xirrus in a press release today. To put it bluntly, we are the traditional switch manufacturers worst nightmare, because there is finally a wireless product that is powerful enough to deliver the capacity, performance, and security to replace wired switches while improving the quality of experience of the end user. For more on Xirrus, read Xirrus Array Debuts, Xirrus Comes to Aid of Tornado-ravaged Town, Xirrus Scores OEM Deal. For more Xirrus campus deployments, see below.
July 31, 2008 The Clinton Public School System in Connecticut has opted to deploy an Aruba Networks WLAN to be used, in part, for wireless video surveillance. The systems will be in place at four elementary, intermediate, and high schools. The first phase of the deployment, at the Lewis G. Joel Elementary School, acquires surveillance video feeds from Panasonic cameras over secure Wi-Fi links, and then makes the video available to school officials as well as mobile police vehicles over an encrypted Wi-Fi channel. The cameras are capable of isolating individuals' faces at distances up to 400 meters (more than 1,300 feet), and license plates at over 200 meters (more than 650 feet). "Besides providing the best possible education for our students, we are also charged with protecting their well-being while under our supervision," said John Crovo, IT Director for the City of Clinton in an Aruba press release June 23. "Given the size and design of our facilities we determined that video surveillance was our best option for detecting unwanted visitors. We use the Aruba network both for our wireless LAN and to collect data from dispersed Panasonic video cameras. Wireless mesh technology and the weather tight AP-85 Outdoor Access Points allow us to place cameras wherever needed. The Milestone software provides camera control, video storage, and motion detection that alerts us when undesirable visitors come in proximity to the school. In the event of an incident, city police have secure wireless access to our video, allowing observations right from patrol cars." Aruba partner OMNI Data LLC is providing integration services. "The Clinton Public School project is the perfect model for any school in need of a cost-effective, highly secure defense against unwelcome visitors including sexual predators, vandals, and drug dealers," said Scott Sebastian, OMNI Data's Director of Sales.
July 9, 2008 Cresskill Junior and Senior High School in Cresskill, NJ announced this week that it has installed a Wi-Fi network to serve its more than 800 students and faculty. The schools laptops are moved around the building as needed on mobile carts, and thanks to a recent district initiative, students are also allowed to bring their own laptops to school for educational use, so achieving widespread access to wireless Internet access for online learning tools and other resources was of great importance to administrators and educators at the school. The district has also implemented the Moodle open-source course-management system, which helps teachers create interactive online instructional programs and distribute assignments. The Meru Networks WLAN, which consists of hallway-mounted wireless access points managed by a central controller, replaces a legacy network that required plugging wireless hardware directly into the school's computers. "When a cart with 25 laptops rolls into the classroom, everyone expects to log on immediately and begin doing research for their projects," said Kevin Whitney, district technology coordinator for Cresskill Public Schools in a Meru Networks press release Monday. "With our old system, half the class often wasn't able to authenticate and get access, and even then there were lots of timeouts. I kept coming across references in the trade press to Meru's ability to handle high density very well, and it's true. Now everyone can connect at once, no matter what kind of laptop they're using, and our wireless network is incredibly reliable." The Cresskill deployment uses Merus AP201 single-radio IEEE 802.11a/b/g access point, the fixed-configuration MC3000 series controller, and Air Traffic Control technology for centralized intelligent RF management, QoS, and security. Cresskill is located in the northern valley area of Bergen County, NJ. The Cresskill Board of Education operates three schools: Edward H. Bryan School and Merritt Memorial School for grades kindergarten through six, and Cresskill Junior/Senior High School for grades seven through twelve. Newsweek magazine ranked Cresskill Junior and Senior High School in the top one per cent of high schools nationally.
June 18, 2008 Xirrus announced yesterday that a nationally recognized school district in Georgia has chosen Xirrus for its new district-wide Wi-Fi network. The Forsyth County School district, which serves more than 35,000 students, faculty, and staff, is the largest employer in Forsyth County. We put Xirrus through the paces for over a yearwe started with six schools, analyzing the results in detail before selecting Xirrus for the entire district, said Mark Klingler, Director of Technical Services at Forsyth County Schools in a Xirrus press release Tuesday. We are putting in the same number of radios (4,000+) as other offerings, but doing it with only 500 Arrays instead of our original estimation of 2,000 access pointsXirrus saved the district over 1,500 cable pulls and will be easier to support. Established in 1860, Forsyth County Schools was one of the first free public school systems in Georgia and currently serves a rapidly expanding student body, adding approximately 2,000 new students each year. Technology is a priority for the district. Every teacher in the system has a laptop, which they use for online grading, reporting, and e-mail. All computers within the Forsyth County schools are networked and offer broadband Internet access. The student to computer ratio is 2:1 and students produce live television broadcasts and have access to a plethora of digital devices including scanners, handhelds, and digital cameras. Parents can also check on their child's portfolios, assignments, grades, and discipline online. June 16, 2008 Meru Networks announced today that Tennessee's highly-ranked Oak Ridge School District has deployed a Wi-Fi network in its newly built Oak Ridge High School and in two middle schools. Roughly 3,000 users will now have Internet access in the schools. By August, Meru expects to have installed 170 APs, most of which will provide wireless coverage across classrooms, administrative areas, and outdoor spaces for the 1500 students and their teachers at Oak Ridge High School. Teachers equipped with tablet PCs will now be able to move about easily in classrooms while using the WLAN to access and present instructional video materials. "For us, wireless is about teacher mobility and the modern educational environment's need for uninterrupted Internet access," said Ray Thach, director of technology for Oak Ridge Schools in a press release today. "We put three major wireless vendors through a lengthy performance testnot in a labenvironment but in a real-world scenario, with teachers using the networks in actual math and science classes. Only Meru powered up, easily deployed, and provided the performance and reliability we were looking for." In addition to addressing critical teacher requirements, Thach said that Merus single-channel approach made his network administration job less labor-intensive. "With all the Meru access points on one channel, there's none of the tedious channel planning that is such aheadache with other vendors' networks," he said. "Network moves, adds and changes are simple. If it turns out that we need another access point for coverage reasons, we just put one in without spending staff time on planning and placementlike plugging in a lamp to get more light. In a K-12 environment, where you're typically trying to accomplish the impossible with a small staff, not having to do channel planning was, by itself, enough of a reason to choose Meru." According to Thach, the district plans to upgrade to 802.11n in selected areas and to extend it into its four elementary schools at some point. The Oak Ridge Schools deployment includes the Meru AP208 access point, which has two radios bothcapable of operating in 802.11a and 802.11b/g modes, and the Meru MC3000 series controller.
June 10, 2008 The Plainfield Community Consolidated School District 202 in Plainfield, Illinois has chosen Aruba Networks WLAN solution for use across its twenty-eight schools. The district covers a 64-square-mile area and supports more than 29,000 students and 3,500 faculty and staff. As part of with the districts five-year plan, an evaluation of the district-wide instructional technology was conducted, which determined that the investment in a Wi-Fi network would benefit faculty, staff, and students. By 2020 our district will be the second-largest in Illinois after the City of Chicago, and our objective was to put in plan wireless infrastructure that could meet our needs today and scale to accommodate future growth, said Russell Moore, Senior Network Administrator of PCSD202 in a press release issued last week. Arubas unified mobility solutions deliver secure networks by integrating adaptive 802.11n WLANs, identity-based security, Wi-Fi-to-cellular solutions, and multi-vendor network management. Arubas wireless LANs are self-optimizing and automate most set-up tasks to maximize reliability and lower IT staff overhead, said Chris Harget, Arubas head of K-12 education marketing in a press release last Wednesday. Our Adaptive Radio Management technology continuously adjusts the network for best data, voice, and video performance, while correcting for interference from nearby networks. Centralized network management enables a small IT team to oversee a very large network, and remotely diagnose problems, download software updates, and modify security policies district-wide. The result is a network that reliably and securely delivers critical eLearning applications, while scaling to meet the needs of even the largest K-12 school districts. June 4, 2008 Not even a decade into a new century, 21st century schools are already leaps and bounds ahead of their 20th century predecessors. In schools like the ones in Brevard County, Florida, Wi-Fi is being employed for a myriad of educational uses and planners believe that even Facebook could positively impact future applications. For more, read "Wi-Fi Schools of the Future." May 20, 2008 Aruba Networks announced today another campus deployment win: the Spring Branch Independent School District (ISD) in Houston, Texas will deploy Arubas 802.11n WLAN technology and identity-based security for use across the districts 51 facilities, including 46 elementary, intermediate, and high schools. Spring Branch ISDs campuses cover more than 44 square miles. The network will serve more than 32,000 students and 6,800 faculty and staff. According to Aruba, the districts technology plan dictated that a district-wide secure Wi-Fi network was needed to address the learning and administrative needs of faculty, staff, and students. The new network will replace a legacy wireless network that served just part of the district, and will address security and scalability requirements. We run a sizable district spread over a large area, and it was imperative that the new wireless network be very simple to set-up and maintain, meet our current and future networking needs including streaming video, and offer high security to protect the privacy and confidentiality of faculty, staff, and student communications, said Venu Rao, Spring Branch ISDs Chief Information Officer in an Aruba Networks press release today. The network will include roughly 2,000 802.11n Aps. Security will include encryption and a policy-based firewall. A free technical brief on 802.11n laptop performance titled 802.11n Client Throughput Performance can be downloaded from Arubas Web site at http://www.arubanetworks.com/pdf/technology/TB_11NPERF.pdf. May 1, 2008 For those interested in learning more about successful WLAN deployments in K-12 environments, Cisco will be hosting a live Webcast on Monday, May 5th from 10:00-10:45 a.m. Pacific Daylight Time. Representatives from two North American K-12 school districts (one American, one Canadian) will discuss their vision, strategy, and experiences leveraging Ciscos networking and wireless solutions. IT professionals from School District No. 23 in Kelowna, British Columbia and the award-winning Brevard School District, in Viera, Florida will discuss the planning and deployment of their networks. The discussion will also highlight K-12 education and technology trends, characteristics of 21st century schools, and will feature a live Q&A session. To register for the Webcast, click here. For those unable to attend the live Webcast, it will be available for replay at the same URL starting on Tuesday, May 6, at 10:00 a.m. PDT.
April 29, 2008 Bluesocket announced today that Anglia Ruskin University is deploying its wireless and mobility solution throughout two campuses in Cambridge and Chelmsford, England. The deployment will include Bluesockets new BSAP-1800 802.11n Access Points (released today) and, according to Bluesocket, "will create an all-wireless campus with improved scalability, reliabilit,y and control while paving the way for a complete 802.11n environment." Anglia Ruskin University recently expanded its wireless access for students and faculty with 100 Bluesocket BSAP-1540 802.11 a/b/g APs and BSC-5200 Controllers. The University is now preparing for a "complete 802.11n wireless transition" by upgrading its new faculty building to 802.11n. April 14, 2008 More than 50,000 Oregon school children in the Lane County School districts will be receiving broadband Wi-Fi access at their schools. The Lane Education Service District (ESD) has selected Aruba Networks for the deployment, which will serve sixteen school districts and more than 120 elementary, intermediate, and high schools in the region. The only way to build a low-maintenance, scalable wireless LAN is by using a centralized, controlled-based architecture with easy-to-use RF visualization and management plus captive portal functionality for guest access, said Russell Rubrecht, Lane ESDs Manager of Network Services in a press release issued today. A controller-based network has a single point of management and, used with RF visualization, allows for remote observation of the wireless LAN without venturing into classrooms and workspaces. Easy-to-use RF management eliminates the need for an engineer to run the network day-to-day, while a captive portal allows users to log in without first loading client software. We selected Aruba because they folded all of those features into one controller, eliminating external RF management and captive portal servers and licenses, and making the network much easier to use. Rubrecht was further quoted in the release as saying, One of Arubas unique features is its remote AP software license that allows any access point to become a VPN end device. We plan to use remote APs where we need a single device, managed from a central location, to provide wireless LAN and VPN, e.g., Lane ESDs 32 remote Special Ed classrooms. Because of features like the remote AP its my opinion that you get more for your money with Arubaits the Holy Grail of 802.11 wireless. April 10, 2008 Aruba Networks announced yesterday that McGill University will be deploying its adaptive wireless LANs across its two Montreal, Quebec campuses. The prestigious university is one of the largest universities in the Canadian province of Quebec, serving more than 33,000 students and 1,570 faculty and staff members. McGill has already deployed more than 2,700 out of a total of 3,700 Aruba APs, making it among the largest university Wi-Fi networks in Canada. Including McGill University, Aruba networks now serve more than 250,000 students in Canadian universities. Universities are challenging environments for wireless networks because of the size of their campuses, the large number of simultaneous users, the dynamic nature of network usage, and the security challenge posed by tens of thousands of unsecured laptops, said Fran Sanda, Arubas manager for Canadian sales in a press release Wednesday. In addition to the robustness and adaptability of our wireless LAN, the ease-of-use of its centralized network management architecture, and the strength of its security features, we believe ARM played a central role in delivering the solid performance McGill University and its users have experienced. April 7, 2008 Aruba Networks announced today that the University of Wyoming has selected Arubas adaptive wireless LAN and AirWave Wireless Management Suite for deployment at its Laramie campus. The new network will replace the Universitys legacy WLAN. Founded in 1887 as a land grant institution, the university serves roughly 13,000 students and is the only provider of baccalaureate and graduate education in the state. Arubas interoperable architecture supports all standard clients including Centrino, Pentium, and Apple, which is particularly useful in college campus environments. Universities rely on their wireless LANs as an essential communications medium for students, faculty, and staff, and as such they must perform well in what is a very dynamic and challenging environment, said Robert Fenstermacher, of Arubas Higher Education Marketing team in a press release today. "Whether enabling interactive learning in densely populated lecture halls, distributing streaming video lectures, or providing softphone capabilities on mobile devices like Apples iPhone, our adaptive wireless LANs are up to the challenge. Used in conjunction with the vendor-neutral AirWave management platform, the result is a standards-based secure mobility solution with industry-leading throughput and low installation and operating costs.
March 24, 2008 Wayne State University (WSU) in Detroit, Michigan, announced today that it has launched a $1.3 million technology initiative, which will include deployment of a new 802.11n network. The project will double the current capacity of Wayne States existing wireless network, wireless@wayne. The deployment, which began earlier this month, is expected to take one year. Meru Networks 802.11n solution will replace the current 802.11b/g wireless access points in 28 WSU buildings, and will be deployed in 22 additional buildings. The total number of APs will increase from 453 to 1,000 to cover all residential and academic buildings on the main campus and will serve up to 33,000 students. March 19, 2008 Utah State University announced today that it has successfully blanketed its 400-acre campus with Wi-Fi. The WLAN, which features more than 700 Meru Indoor and Outdoor access points, will serve roughly 25,000 students, faculty, and staff. 150 buildings, including all academic facilities and residences on the Logan, Utah, campus are covered. Future plans call for access to be added to commonly-used outdoor areas and inter-building corridors, in the hope of providing seamless campus-wide VoWi-Fi. Prior to this upgrade, Utah State had a WLAN that contained approximately 50 APs and supported only a handful of buildings on campus. For indoor wireless coverage, Utah State uses Meru's AP201 single-radio IEEE 802.11a/b/g access point, which supports 2.4- and 5-GHz operation. For outdoor coverage, the university has tested Meru's OAP180 Rugged Access Point and plans to begin deployment this spring. Nine Meru MC3000 series controllers have been deployed, separated into two groupsacademic and residentialeach with an N+1 configuration for failover purposes.According to a university spokesperson, the Utah State Wi-Fi network will begin to incorporate 802.11n in the next major upgrade. March 14, 2008 Motorola and Moonblink Communications this week announced that the San Marino Unified School District in Northern California will be their first customer to deploy an 802.11n Wi-Fi network using the new Motorola AP-7131 tri-radio access point along with Motorolas Point-to-Point (PTP) solutions to connect a total of four school campuses. The AP-7131 provides 24/7 intrusion protection and delivers full 600Mbps connection speeds, while simultaneously providing enterprise-class security. February 21, 2008 Duke University announced this week that it is about to roll out the next phase of its 802.11n deployment. The network features 2,500 Cisco 802.11n Aironet 1250 Series APs, which, according to Cisco, makes it the largest planned 802.11n wireless network in the world by any organization to date. Duke intends to light up more than six million square feet of its Raleigh, N.C. campus to service roughly 45,000 students, faculty, and staff in academic halls, libraries, residence halls, and other campus buildings with high-speed, broadband Wi-Fi We expect the campus-wide 802.11n wireless network to increasingly be the primary mode of connectivity for data access and mobility applications, said Dukes chief information officer, Tracy Futhey. The value of a technology like 802.11n is about enabling new kinds of uses on our campus, giving our students new opportunities and enabling faculty to push the limits and try things that were not possible before on previous wireless technologies. So far, testing has proved the benefits of the upgraded network. During real-world tests, Duke experienced predictable and reliable wireless coverage and consistent average data throughput performance of nearly 130 Mbps per client with the Cisco Aironet 1250 Series access point, said Cisco in a press release Tuesday. In addition, tests at Duke indicated that existing 802.11g clients such as laptops connected to a Cisco Aironet 1250 Series access point obtained almost twice the data rate achieved while connected to an older wireless network, demonstrating the benefit of 802.11n to existing Wi-Fi devices. Among the uses to which the network will be put are collaborative learning exercises and video applications. No mention has yet been made regarding whether or not Vo-Wi-Fi is in the plans. February 11, 2008 The University of Miami has selected Meru Networks to deploy its new campus-wide 802.11n network. The indoor/outdoor deployment began last month and is expected to be completed early this spring. Once finished, the Wi-Fi network will include 525 wireless access points and will serve more than 25,000 students, faculty, and staff. The University plans to had VoWi-Fi later this year. Roughly 20% of the APs have been deployed to date. The Meru products being used in the deployment include the AP300 family of single- and dual-radio APs, and the MC5000 controllers, which provide centralized intelligence and control for up to 1,000 access points. In anticipation of natural disasters or other causes of outages, plans call for the deployment of two geographically separated MC5000 units--one in the university's data center, the other in the main campus--in a fully redundant configuration. February 6, 2008 Concordia University in Montreal has deployed Canadas first campus-wide 802.11n wireless network. The indoor/outdoor WLAN uses the Wi-Fi-certified 802.11n Aironet 1250 Series Access Points from Cisco to expand its existing campus-wide 802.11g network. The upgraded network serves approximately 40,000 students. Concordia has been on the cutting-edge of wireless technology in Canada since the turn of the century. Its claims to fame include deploying Canadas first WLAN in 2001 and becoming Canadas first university to roll out VoWi-Fi (2003). Currently, the university acts as a telecommunications service provider to students, faculty, and staff. Use of the indoor 802.11n network is offered for free, but the university charges subscribers a monthly rate of CAN$8.99 for outdoor access. The university is currently working on a plan that will allow students to seamlessly offload calls from their mobile providers' networks while on campus. Our IT organization serves as a service provider, a storage provider, a software provider, and more, said Andrew McAusland, associate vice president of Instructional and Information Technology Services at Concordia University in a press release issued last week. We make a conscientious effort to provide our students with advanced services...Our work with Cisco, particularly the combination of 802.11n wireless networking, VoIP over WLAN, outdoor mesh and seamless mobile collaboration technologies, brings this vision to life. Ciscos Aironet 1250 Series Access Point was introduced to market last fall and is the industrys first Wi-Fi-certified 802.11n draft 2.0 access point. February 1st, 2008 The public school system in Santa Fe, New Mexico, has begun deploying a WLAN that will provide wireless coverage for 35 buildings more than 14,000 students, faculty and staff over the next two years. The Wi-Fi network is expected to cost $500,000-$750,000 over the term of the project. Coverage will extend district-wide to include three high schools, four middle schools, 19 elementary schools, and various administration buildings. The initial IEEE 802.11a/b/g WLAN deployment uses Meru solutionsalready in use at three schools in the district. Plans are in effect to add draft 11n APs, as well. The Meru AP300 Access Point family and MC5000 Controller, which will be used in this deployment, are fully backward-compatible with the company's 802.11a/b/g products. The district-wide Wi-Fi deployment is one element an ongoing infrastructure upgrade, which will enable teachers and students take advantage of an array of streaming video-based learning materials. The first Meru APs were installed in 2006. The district-wide coverage is expected to be completed by 2010. December 13, 2007 Cornell University announced this week that it has begun deploying Aruba Networks adaptive wireless LANs across its 745-acre Ithaca, New York campus. The Ivy League university is home to more than 20,000 students and 14,000 faculty and staff. Once completed, the network will include 4,500 wireless indoor and outdoor access points. The first phase of Cornells deployment involves replacing almost 900 legacy wireless devices with Arubas wireless access points, including new 802.11n devices. The APs will be managed by Arubas 80Gbps MMC-6000 Multi-Service Mobility Controller. The School District of Philadelphia (SDP), the eighth largest school district in the U.S., is now home to one of the worlds largest enterprise-grade wireless LANs. Meru Networks and Avaya teamed up on the project, which will provide applications including VoWi-Fi and video to nearly 268 schools. The new network will serve more than 166,000 students and 10,000 teachers. Meru says it has deployed 7,000 radio switches and more than 28,000 radios. Avaya is providing the communications applications and services, and was the system integrator for the project, along with H. J. Heinz Company. The network is part of the School of the Future project, a 2005 initiative led by Microsoft and the SDP. November 26, 2007 Envision Schools (ES), a non-profit charter management organization located in the San Francisco Bay area, has announced that it will deploy Xirrus Wi-Fi arrays on the campuses of all four of its high schools: Impact Academy of Arts & Technology; Envision Academy of Arts & Technology; Metropolitan School of Arts & Technology; and City Arts &Technology High School, all of which are located in the San Francisco Bay Area. Envision charter schools employ a project-based instructional model, which utilizes a personalized learning environment and workplace learning. Arts and digital technology are integrated across all content areas as tools for understanding and expression. The schools have a 2:1 student-to-laptop ratio. The Xirrus Wi-Fi rollout is part of an overall infrastructure upgrade at ES. Xirruss Wi-Fi network is part of our three-year technology plan designed to deliver on our mission to get all students, especially First Generation College Bound students, to and through college. We use technology to enable our students to achieve advanced levels within California State Standards, said John Krull, VP of Technology at Envision in a press release. Co-founded by Daniel McLaughlin, a former Vice President at Bank of America, and Bob Lenz, an award-winning teacher and nationally recognized school reform leader, Envision Schools began operations in June 2002. The nonprofit organization creates small, high-performing urban public schools designed to serve diverse student bodies, particularly First Generation College Bound (FGCB) youth. A fifth ES charter school was scheduled to open this fall. November 14th, 2007 Aruba Networks announced on Monday that Carnegie Mellon University has started deploying Arubas 802.11n adaptive wireless LANs across its campus. Located in Pittsburgh, PA, Carnegie Mellon has roughly 10,000 students and 4,000 faculty and staff. The university, known in large part for its research facilities, has been something of a pioneer in wireless networking thanks to its Wireless Andrew program. Wireless Andrew began as a research network in 1994 to support Carnegie Mellon's wireless research initiative, and was later expanded throughout the academic and administrative buildings as well as student residence halls. Arubas equipment will be used to update the entire academic campus networkbut not campus residence halls--with 802.11n managed by Arubas new 80Gbps Multi-Service Mobility Controllers. Specifically, the university will employ Arubas AP-124/AP-125 802.11n Access Points and 80Gbps MMC-6000 Multi-Service Mobility Controller. November 13th, 2007 Last month, just before the famed swallows made their annual departure from San Juan Capistrano, California, students at a local Catholic high school (JSerra) were treated to a new arrival: a Wi-Fi network that blankets the entire 40-acre campus with coverage. The network, made up of Xirrus Wi-Fi arrays will serve the faculty, staff, and 1,000 students. All JSerra students are required to use a laptop and to connect to the campus-wide network as part of what the administration calls academic enrichment activities. Students are also required to check student portals and utilize the schools Web mail system. Loyola College in Maryland has expanded its wireless campus network using Meru's Fourth Generation WLAN System. The Meru Wi-Fi system was initially deployed only in residence halls and consisted of 300 Meru AP208 APs and four Meru MC3150 wireless controllers. It is now being expanded to cover the main campus and three satellite facilities. The system will provide complete wireless access to more than 6,000 students and 1,000 faculty and staff. Loyola is a Jesuit Catholic comprehensive university with 3,500 undergraduate and 2,600 graduate students. In addition to basic Internet access, the network is used for video, voice, and data applications. Naomi Graychase is Managing Editor at Wi-FiPlanet.
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