FYI, Radiator (http://www.open.com.au/radiator) supports RADIUS authentication from native Apple Directory Server and Apple Password Server (including MSCHAPV2) which means you can do same-password-everywhere on Mac for both workstations and secure wireless access (eg PEAP-EAP-MSCHAPV2 or TTLS-MSCHAPV2, TTLS-PAP etc)
"Cisco already offers secure authentication for their own wireless gear with LEAP, and did an outstanding job of making this capability available for Linux and OS/X, as well as for Windows"
As far as I can see, Cisco have never released the spec for LEAP, so its hard to see how they have done an outstanding job of supporting the Linux or opensource communities. LEAP is a proprietary, closed, secret protocol. All the available implementations are binary-only, non source commercial.
And without the spec in the public, how can anyone be sure it really is secure?
I think Cisco have let everyone down with LEAP.
FYI, Radiator (http://www.open.com.au/radiator) supports RADIUS authentication from native Apple Directory Server and Apple Password Server (including MSCHAPV2) which means you can do same-password-everywhere on Mac for both workstations and secure wireless access (eg PEAP-EAP-MSCHAPV2 or TTLS-MSCHAPV2, TTLS-PAP etc)
"Cisco already offers secure authentication for their own wireless gear with LEAP, and did an outstanding job of making this capability available for Linux and OS/X, as well as for Windows" As far as I can see, Cisco have never released the spec for LEAP, so its hard to see how they have done an outstanding job of supporting the Linux or opensource communities. LEAP is a proprietary, closed, secret protocol. All the available implementations are binary-only, non source commercial. And without the spec in the public, how can anyone be sure it really is secure? I think Cisco have let everyone down with LEAP.