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Wireless LANs Face Huge Scaling Challenges

BobB writes with this excerpt from NetworkWorld: "Early WLANs focused on growing the number of access points to cover a given area. But today, many wireless administrators are focusing more attention on scaling capacity to address a surge in end users and the multimedia content they consume (this is particularly being seen at universities). Supporting this involves everything from rethinking DNS infrastructure to developing a deeper understanding of what access points can handle. And 802.11n is no silver bullet, warn those building big wireless networks. 'These scaling issues are becoming more and more apparent where lots of folks show up and you need to make things happen,' says the former IT director for a big Ivy League campus."

7 of 89 comments (clear)

  1. So basically by Architect_sasyr · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ...we're having the same issues we did when we stopped using dialup and moved to broadband?

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  2. Hmmm by Colin+Smith · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Bits of wire are dedicated to individuals, wifi spectrum is shared between individuals. Who'd have thought that might create scalability issues...

    Perhaps dedicating a little bit of the spectrum to each individual might fix the scalability problems.
     

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    1. Re:Hmmm by thompson.ash · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Surely dedicating a segment of that spectrum would cause problems ensuring equality of access?

      At the moment it seems that the more people you have on, the lower your bandwidth - stands to reason.

      Surely allocating fixed bandwidth on a first come first served basis would mean eventually you would run out of bandwidth to allocate and people would be denied access?

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    2. Re:Hmmm by walt-sjc · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You will find a large number of those individuals right here on /.

      About a year or so ago there was a discussion about WiFi, and I mentioned that I wired my entire house with the standard 2 RG6U, 2 Cat5e, 2 fiber to every room, sometimes two drops in a room. I have jacks EVERYWHERE. People said I was nuts. I said I was future-proofing - they claimed wireless would get faster too. And the response is Of course it will get faster, but so will physical cable as we have seen.

      The bottom line is that wireless can not and will not replace physical cable. It can only supplement. Primary connectivity should always be planned to be wired. Yes it's more expensive. A LOT more expensive. But you need it.

      Wireless by nature is flaky. I can have a laptop 10 feet from an AP and it can drop connection (and I don't care what brand of laptop or AP you have - it happens.) Why? Because the primary wireless frequency, 2.4Ghz, is a cesspool. I find it highly obnoxious that the FCC refused to allocate a band specifically and ONLY for WiFi - especially considering how extremely important connectivity is in this modern world. But Alas, they are only concerned about how much money they can bring in via auctioning off a PUBLIC resource, selling it to a corporate entity which in return lets the public use that band for insane prices.

    3. Re:Hmmm by Migraineman · · Score: 4, Insightful

      802.11whatever is an access point solution. Folks who expect it to be a backhaul or backbone solution are ... not well versed in network architectures. I find it amusing that folks think an ad-hoc mesh of 802.11 nodes will *ever* have performance comparable to wired/fibered connections. Just the "shared medium" aspect should be enough to indicate performance will degrade as more connections are added. Shoveling more nodes into the mesh won't magically improve performance.

      Eh, it doesn't surprise me. Evidence of this logical disassociation is everywhere - digital cameras, cars, appliances, computers, tools ... Listen carefully and you'll hear the cries of the oppressed - "I don't want to know how it works, I just want to [do blah]."

  3. No by Colin+Smith · · Score: 4, Insightful

    We're having the same scalability issues which existed with 10base2 technology and 10/100baseT on a hub. The solution is "the switch".

     

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  4. Re:Directional access points by atomico · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Access network planning and optimization is a big expense for mobile network operators: selecting sites, anntenas and channel allocation, base stations, base station controllers... lots of complexity which has to be handled carefully to obtain a decent quality of service without breaking the bank. It is a full-grown discipline with its specialized training, books, professionals, etc.

    Don't expect that WLAN can work magically without a similar effort.