Making WiFi fast
Making WiFi fast
Posted Nov 10, 2016 1:39 UTC (Thu) by samroberts (subscriber, #46749)In reply to: Making WiFi fast by jonth
Parent article: Making WiFi fast
Posted Nov 11, 2016 0:13 UTC (Fri)
by cesarb (subscriber, #6266)
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(A coworker just found out that the Ethernet wire to one of the WiFi APs at work was broken, which explains network issues they were having.)
Posted Nov 14, 2016 6:13 UTC (Mon)
by eduard.munteanu (guest, #66641)
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Posted Mar 9, 2019 1:29 UTC (Sat)
by gdt (subscriber, #6284)
[Link]
A good RJ-45 jack is rated for 2,500 cycles. So wireless is a much better fit for high-traffic areas such as cafes and libraries. Patch leads are a small but ongoing expense, and staff and students don't like "BYO patch lead".
A wired port costs around $200 per wallport to cable. But this can blow out when a custom solution is required. Wiring a cafe table will cost more than than table.
Wireless networks work without any further action by the user. Once set up (which is far too hard) Eduroam connects your laptop or phone to the campus network the moment you go to use the device. No searching for a jack and patch lead. Wireless is so convenient that it's common to see a person sitting next to a wall port but using wireless.
Wired from modern devices is difficult. Using wired ethernet from a phone or tablet requires special cabling (a OTG cable) to the ethernet dongle. The dongle itself is a optional purchase. Cheaper dongles meant for laptops might not have driver support in a phone. Using wired ethernet from a recent laptop requires a USB-C/ethernet dongle, which means the laptop can't be powered whilst using the wired network. To have both power and wired networking requires a bulky and expensive "docking station".
We should be telling people who need network performance to use wired. But that may not end up being the bulk of the connections on a campus network.
Making WiFi fast
Making WiFi fast
Making WiFi fast