Cisco To Unveil Wireless Mesh Hardware 70
An anonymous reader writes "CRN is reporting that Cisco will enter the wireless mesh networking fray next week. Since aquiring Airespace Cisco has been working hard to bring their own mesh technology to fruition. The new solution will target businesses who wish to move the traditional Wi-Fi network outside and possibly cover large regions."
Why hardware? (Score:1)
Re:Why hardware? (Score:5, Informative)
-Rick
Re:Why hardware? (Score:2)
no Harry Harlow references yet? (Score:3, Funny)
Doesn't have to be a hardware thing, but when you're Cisco, everything should be solved with hardware.
Re:no Harry Harlow references yet? (Score:2)
Their "new" mesh stuff seems to go beyond a simple mesh, but considering how their own existing wireless devices can pretty much already do what they're announcing, I'm not seeing anything truly special here.
And I would imagine that most of the "new" stuff could be added to existing mesh-supporting firmware.
Re:Why hardware? (Score:5, Informative)
In a true mesh topology only one node requires a wired connection, and the traffic can be routed through nodes which attach to this node to nodes further away. If I understand Cisco's idea of a "mesh" the end nodes (the ones in the street lights) etc cannot route anything to any other nodes.
Now the interesting thing is that people have been building mesh networks for a few years now. They take the very inexpensive WRTG54G, and put a linux image on it. From that point on it's a matter of using open source software (available in various shapes and forms) to make this very inexpensive box into a true mesh node.
I think another point which is being lost here is that people (including municipalities) want to roll these things out at low cost. Because nobody wants to pay huge money to access them, and the coverage of an individual node is so small, the cost per access point must be low, and I mean REALLY low (like under $100). Cisco will never provide a solution for these costs - that's just not how they work.
So in the Cisco solution we have to also have a tower, so we can blast out 802.11a signal to all the nodes - also not very desirable. What if we want to cover a few streets and don't have proper line of sight? Suddenly it means multiple towers and escalating costs. A true mesh network hands the signal between adjacent nodes so line of sight isn't always needed to cover an area.
There are people out there rolling out working mesh networks right now, yet we are reading how there is big demand for this "new" technology. Please... Or am I missing something here?
The only problem I see with the existing solutions based on the WRTG54G is that it isn't an outdoor device. What we need is for someone to design a little box with very lower power consumption that can handle outdoor environments, and still keep it as low cost...
Just my two cents' worth.
Re:Why hardware? (Score:4, Informative)
...
"The Aironet 1500 is priced at $3,999. A kit with an Aironet 1500 access point and equipment for pole-top mounting will sell for $4,645, and a 1500 with a rooftop mounting kit will sell for $4,815, according to the documents."
So much for the 'reducing deployment costs' part...
Re:Why hardware? (Score:3, Informative)
That's why I've been plugging the CU Wireless Network [cuwireless.net]. It is a self organizing mesh that is open source (BSD License). It is one of the first networks to use the HSLS (Hazy Sighted Link State [cuwireless.net]) algorithm.
Re:Why hardware? (Score:5, Informative)
On the data plane side, they truly are mesh and can talk to any other device in that mesh.
Re:Why hardware? (Score:2)
Mesh... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Mesh... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Stupidity (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Stupidity (Score:1)
Cost (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Cost (Score:1)
Apples vs. oranges (Score:2)
Re:Cost (Score:1)
Remember when h
Hmmm... (Score:4, Insightful)
Of course, the other direction works as well: cell networks providing faster access. Unfortunately, most cell providers seem (to me) to be shooting themselves in the foot, charging far too high of prices for data access. IMO, they'd be better off trying to maximize market share in this segment by selling the service at near break-even pricing. I did a bit of math a while back, and figured that at least from one provider, each bit of "data" cost something like 5 times as much to transmit as each bit of "voice" -- strange, at least IMO.
--
The universe is a figment of its own imagination.
Re:Hmmm... (Score:2)
Re:Hmmm... (Score:1, Insightful)
The point of a mesh network is that not all the nodes in the mesh need a dedicated internet connection -- the packets from one node are routed along the mesh of peer wireless nodes until they reach an uplink/outside-world connection.
In cellular, each tower has to have its own backhaul connection -- lots of voice circuits, some data lines -- and each client device ("phone") connects onl
Re:Hmmm... (Score:2)
That's because the phone companies manually program in "adjacencies" - which cells are near to what. It's not the handset that says "I can see Cell 1241, I'm going to move" - it's the phone company's network that tells the phone to move.
WiFi is a lot more ad-hoc - you can't just put up a new cell on a phone network, and expect it to work.
Re:Hmmm... (Score:2)
That's not really true -- while the base station is programmed with an adjacency list, it basically just acts as a crib for the handset. In particular, while a base station can detect when the signal from a handset is getting weak, it has no way to guess at the directi
Re:Hmmm... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Hmmm... (Score:2)
-- wanders off grumbling about stupid verizon service --
Nothing like traditional cellular networks (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Nothing like traditional cellular networks (Score:1)
Re:Nothing like traditional cellular networks (Score:4, Insightful)
Oh, I realize from a technical viewpoint they're entirely different -- but I also realize that from the viewpoint of using them, the primary differences are speed and cost; minor (!) details like who assigns addresses or how the data is routed after it gets to the ground station clearly make a big difference in how you design the network, but are (hopefully) transparent in how you use them.
Realistically, it's true that somewhere between those, you get the job of deploying the network, and here it still makes a big difference -- particularly, in most cases, Joe Blow won't be able to install a network himself if he has to program in the handoff partners manually.
Nonetheless, an awful lot of people get a professional to do at least major parts of network installation, and for somebody who has a clue of what they're doing, this wouldn't make a big difference in most circumstances -- you program them in once, and only mess with things when you have to replace something. Of course, being from Cisco these boxes will undoubtedly require at least a dozen commands to do anything, (or entries at a GUI designed specifically to make a command line seem as straightforward as possible) but that's just Cisco, and really has nothing to do with mesh networking...
--
The universe is a figment of its own imagination.
AP Roaming Question (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:AP Roaming Question (Score:3, Informative)
Re:AP Roaming Question (Score:2)
I found that turning the signal down to 20-30mw reduces the number of AP's that try to negotiate with you, and AP-to-AP handoff went a lot smoother. YMMV.
Re:AP Roaming Question (Score:1)
Re:AP Roaming Question (Score:2, Informative)
Turning SSID broadcast on will vastly improve roaming performance regardless of client hardware/software.
There are many who still feel that disabling SSID broadcast is an effective security measure (it isn't) so their wifi performance suffers.
Google for wp_ssid_hiding.pdf...
Breaking the monopolies for internet access (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Breaking the monopolies for internet access (Score:1)
Also you will need some model for paying for your traffic or else there will be zero incentive to provide these connections to the backbone.
Re:Breaking the monopolies for internet access (Score:2)
Re:Breaking the monopolies for internet access (Score:1)
Re:Breaking the monopolies for internet access (Score:2)
The issue of bandwidth and QOS already exists with the current WiF
Re:Breaking the monopolies for internet access (Score:1)
Support Open Source Wireless Meshes! (Score:3, Informative)
Champaign-Urbana Community Wireless Network [cuwireless.net]
(Disclaimer: I'm a contributer to said project)
Re:Support Open Source Wireless Meshes! (Score:1)
Is this really mesh? (Score:2)
Ok, first of all you have to connect to this central system that links to 32 remote systems. I'm not positive, but it doesn't even look like the remote systems (called Aironet 1500's) can communicate with each other. I thought the whole concept of mesh networks is having large number of users able to connect to one another. This seems more like an extension cord to your central connection point that can li
Traditions (Score:2)
traditional Wi-Fi network (Score:3, Insightful)
It's words like these that show us just how fast technology is being developed.
compat with 802.11s ? (Score:1, Interesting)
Will the hardware be upgradeable to the future IEEE 802.11s [wikipedia.org] standard for mesh networks?
If your really need this then they should buy it, otherwise it may be a better idea to wait.
Mesh, Smesh... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Mesh, Smesh... (Score:1)
Current mesh problems.. (Score:2, Interesting)
If you were to have a mesh network using up TWO wireless channels, e
Why ? (Score:1)