Click here to receive your FREE subscription to Campus Technology
Home > Utah State University Blankets Campus with Wireless Coverage
Networking
Utah State University Blankets Campus with Wireless Coverage
3/27/2008
By Dian Schaffhauser
Utah State University has blanketed its 400-acre campus with wireless coverage for 25,000 students, faculty and staff using wireless LAN equipment from
Meru Networks.
The Logan, UT school has installed 700 Meru wireless access points in 150 of 200 buildings on campus, including all academic facilities and residences. It has also installed the access points at a number of remote sites across the state. Future plans call for coverage to be added in widely-used outdoor venues and inter-building corridors, providing a foundation for campus-wide Internet telephony (VoIP) usage.
Utah State decided in early 2007 to replace its existing wireless system of about 50 access points in a few buildings with a campus-wide deployment, according to network team coordinator Kevin Grover. The goal was "100 percent coverage on campus."
After evaluating six wireless LAN vendors, the university selected Meru. Key to the decision, Grover said, was Meru's single-channel technology, which made the WLAN easy to deploy and maintain without a large staff.
"All the other systems we looked at were just extensions of old access-point technology, requiring extensive engineering and planning up front to make the three-channel deployment cover all the areas without interference," he said. "If we found a dead spot in a building after deploying, we'd have to re-engineer the channel allocations to accommodate another access point. Meru takes a completely different approach, putting all the access points on one channel. Now if we find a dead spot we can just throw up another access point and not have to worry about channel interference. With this approach we can get by with one full-time employee monitoring and managing the entire wireless network."
With all access points operating on the same channel, Grover said, Meru technology is also well suited to handle VoIP, because no "handoffs" are required as users roam around buildings. The same advantages apply to streaming video applications, such as the "remote rolling classroom" the university created as a pilot research project in elementary education; a large-screen TV on a cart can be moved from place to place and wirelessly connect.
For indoor wireless coverage, Utah State uses Meru's AP201 single-radio IEEE 802.11a/b/g access point, which supports 2.4- and 5-GHz operation. For outdoor coverage, the university has tested Meru's OAP180 Rugged Access Point and plans to begin deployment this spring, providing network access in areas where students and faculty congregate and use their laptops and PDAs, as well as in corridors joining academic buildings. Nine Meru MC3000 series controllers are deployed, separated into two groups--academic and residential--each with an N+1 configuration for failover purposes.
Currently based on the IEEE 802.11b/g standard, the Utah State wireless network will begin to incorporate the newer high-performance 802.11n standard in the next major upgrade, Grover said.
Dian Schaffhauser is a writer who covers technology and business. Send your higher education technology news to her at dian@dischaffhauser.com.
Cite this Site
Dian Schaffhauser, "Utah State University Blankets Campus with Wireless Coverage," Campus Technology, 3/27/2008, http://www.campustechnology.com/article.aspx?aid=60119
copy text (above) for proper citation
Recommended Reading
- IMS/NGN Forum 'Plugfest' Eyes UC
In a way, it's not surprising that the sixth IMS/NGN Forum interoperability "plugfest," and the first to be held since the organizations formerly merged this week, will drill down into the unified communications (UC) space.
- Microsoft Promises To Improve UAC in Windows 7
Microsoft has been talking about future changes to Windows Vista's most maligned feature, User Account Control (UAC). This security feature, which alerts users via popup boxes, may get modified with Microsoft's next-generation Windows OS, according to the "Engineering Windows 7" blog.
- 'Blog Action Day' Calls for Discussion of Poverty
The second annual Blog Action Day takes place today, bringing together 8,000-plus blog, podcast, and videocast sites to post about the same issue on the same day. This year's topic is poverty. The purpose of the effort is, according to organizers, "to create a discussion. We ask bloggers to take a single day out of their schedule and focus it on an important issue. By doing so on the same day, the blogging community effectively changes the conversation on the web and focuses audiences around the globe on that issue. Out of this discussion naturally flow actions, advice, ideas, plans, and empowerment."
- Apple Refreshes Entire Notebook Line
Apple has refreshed its entire notebook lineup--including the MacBook, MacBook Pro, and MacBook Air--adding in expanded graphics capabilities, greater storage capacities, and, in some cases, faster CPUs. Al of the new models are available now, except for the MacBook Air, which will ship in November.
- American U Takes 'Campus Experience' Online
American University in Washington, DC has signed with media agency Realview TV to design, produce, and stream the school's online "Virtual Campus Experience." The video will showcase its students, faculty, and virtual campus on the Web via an interactive video-based micro site that's designed to match the school's brand.
- Is Higher Ed Technology Keeping Up with Student Demand?
Students see campus technology is a key factor in selecting a college or university and consider it critical for their professional development. Yet higher education institutions on the whole aren't keeping up with student needs in this area, according to a new report released Monday by CDW Government (CDW-G).