Wireless (or Wi-Fi as we all call it) is ubiquitous. It's everywhere - we consume Wi-Fi at home, at the office and with guest services when we're out and about.
The need to provide Wi-Fi is clear. How you fund that Wi-Fi install is a different question. Would it be useful to be able to lease your Wi-Fi installation? An evergreen model of support and upgrades provides your business with the Wi-Fi services you need, without all the headaches of maintaining it.
I've worked with wireless technologies for quite a few years now - it's fair to say I've seen a lot of changes and development in that time. Moore's law stated that the number of transistors on a CPU would double every 2 years.
Wireless is pretty similar in many respects - it's a constant evolution. Data rates and throughput speeds keep increasing continuously, new features are added and the refresh cycle keeps apace of every 3 - 4 years. It's a fast moving space!
If you wanted to read a bit more on wireless, we have a range of great blogs, such as how to tune RF and a great eBook on the Top 8 Secrets to Great Wi-Fi.
And here in lies the problem for businesses: the constant upgrade cycle is costly and takes your business away from what it should actually be doing. We can help, with the provision of Wi-Fi as a service.
There's a good graphic on this below, which illustrates how quickly Wi-Fi has come to dominate the way in which we connect:
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It occurred to me though that something reasonably fundamental has changed along the way. The early
I should also say that the code seemed to be relatively bug free at the time, which is something that also seems to have changed, but that's another blog, for another time.
Oh.. and those early networks didn't require much in the way of throughput.
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Fast forward and we're now throwing all sorts of services (and devices) at the network - and demanding it to do things that it was probably never designed for. It's a testament though to the technology that it's been able to evolve, with new features and roaming algorithms bolted on.
Roaming in particular demands careful design of cell size and overlap and the whole network should be designed to meet the needs of the weakest transmitter.
As painful as it is to add more APs, you need to match transmit powers of APs and devices (I've written a range of other blogs on this topic if you fancy a browse).
We regularly do voice and RTLS grade networks now, with BYOD thrown in. There's a load more clients, which now have to roam perfectly.
It can all be made work - but you need to adhere to the design rules, fault find any bugs and ensure the network is configured correctly..
But here's the rather obvious revelation. The network is a service now.
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You could outsource the ownership of the wireless network and just own what it delivers - a bunch of services. The network is now really about multiple services and wireless is slowly overtaking wired client density.
This trend is heavily driven by the advent of the 'Internet of Things', which will introduce an unknown, but most likely very high number of new unmanaged wireless devices. We're definitely moving to the point where wired networks are becoming less important (for clients which aren't PoE anyway).
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I think it means we're looking at a bit of an evangelical view that the wireless network is no longer just about delivering base connectivity for some non-roaming clients, but it's now so much more fundamental.
Apple coined the brilliant marketing slogan "Think Different". (Incidentally, they had a lot of debate about whether that should be 'Think Different" or "Think Differently" - the two having quite different meanings.
Steve Jobs wanted the "Think Different", with the stronger connotation on breaking the thinking outside of the box).
It's time to do the same with wireless networks.
Let's move beyond thinking how you want to put a few APs in to deliver a hotspot service and start thinking about what you want the network to actually do. If you want to build reliable Warehouse Wi-Fi, or delight with Hotel Wi-Fi that actually works, you need to start with a proper design methodology.
This can all be built in to a service contract, so that you own the outcomes, but not the network.
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At IPTel, we build enterprise networks. There's a refresh cycle for customers and periodically those customers need to request capital budget to refresh their installation. Wi-Fi has a shorter refresh cycle typically than LAN switching - it's evolving quickly, and in some cases supplanting the need for wired desktop outlets.
Keeping current - and managing a Wi-Fi network - are a burden to businesses who just want to get on with what they do best in their chosen field.
The answer is Wi-Fi as a service. We can help and the advantages are many: