hi everybody
this one is a bit of a long shot for me... i'm not used to dealing with wifi networks with end-user load of this order -- i'm glad i got the account, and i'd like to keep it -- yes, this is a bit of a challenge for me, so i look forward to growing through this experience and increasing my technical knowledge and experience
i'm being called in to a situation where they have a (consumer grade DLink DIR655) router and a couple "mix-n-match" WAPs (Amped Wireless AP300 and Linksys WAP54G) - i'm being asked to make some recommendations as to how to improve connectivity in the house
there are 35 residents living on the premises (sorority house in the san diego state area - yeah, i know - can't seem to catch a break can i...
) -- there are three floors in the structure - router is on the first floor (SE corner) - WAPs on the second and third floors (SW corner and SE corner, respectively) -- catV connecting them all
the current complaints are that they often can't seem to connect to a wifi device - or, having connected, stay connected - also, the on-screen indication is that they are connected with good signal, but they are unable to get through to the internet
while i was there (mid-morning on a weekday - admittedly during a low-usage time) i had no trouble whatsoever connecting my laptop to all three wifi devices from the same location (ie - signal to the furthest WAP was sufficient from the furthest point in the residence - thus, i don't think raw signal strength is the problem)
i suspect its just a matter of the poor lil wifi network just getting over-taxed (unequal load distribution?) - everybody connecting to the downstairs router and no others, for example
we must also consider a small number of residents logging on to youtube/netflix/pandora and soaking up all the available bandwidth... (??) -- this is sdsu after all
i did a bandwidth speed test and found that they're getting 10-12MB from cox
.
.
.
my questions... would you recommend a hardware refresh? current h/w is vintage late-2009 (?)
but also... shouldn't the existing h/w be able to handle 10-15 simultaneous users??
this one is a bit of a long shot for me... i'm not used to dealing with wifi networks with end-user load of this order -- i'm glad i got the account, and i'd like to keep it -- yes, this is a bit of a challenge for me, so i look forward to growing through this experience and increasing my technical knowledge and experience
i'm being called in to a situation where they have a (consumer grade DLink DIR655) router and a couple "mix-n-match" WAPs (Amped Wireless AP300 and Linksys WAP54G) - i'm being asked to make some recommendations as to how to improve connectivity in the house
there are 35 residents living on the premises (sorority house in the san diego state area - yeah, i know - can't seem to catch a break can i...

the current complaints are that they often can't seem to connect to a wifi device - or, having connected, stay connected - also, the on-screen indication is that they are connected with good signal, but they are unable to get through to the internet
while i was there (mid-morning on a weekday - admittedly during a low-usage time) i had no trouble whatsoever connecting my laptop to all three wifi devices from the same location (ie - signal to the furthest WAP was sufficient from the furthest point in the residence - thus, i don't think raw signal strength is the problem)
i suspect its just a matter of the poor lil wifi network just getting over-taxed (unequal load distribution?) - everybody connecting to the downstairs router and no others, for example
we must also consider a small number of residents logging on to youtube/netflix/pandora and soaking up all the available bandwidth... (??) -- this is sdsu after all
i did a bandwidth speed test and found that they're getting 10-12MB from cox
.
.
.
my questions... would you recommend a hardware refresh? current h/w is vintage late-2009 (?)
but also... shouldn't the existing h/w be able to handle 10-15 simultaneous users??