When attending confrences in past years I have been frustrated at the 
quality/reliability of the wireless access. In many cases it's been clear 
that the person setting things up did not understand the effects of many 
computers in a small area..

Well, I now have a chance to show that I can do a better job.

I believe I have a good handle on managing the RF side of things (set the 
access points to low power, use directional antennas to get coverage of 
the rooms without overlapping other access points, I have a wifi spectrum 
analyser to be able to measure coverage and the effect of the walls, etc)

However, I can't think of anything particularly special on the IP side of 
things that I need to do. I can rate limit individual connections, use 
something like packetfence to watch for machines that look like they are 
infected and try and isolate them.

I can police the vendor area with the scanner and ask booths that bring up 
their own access points to disable them (a major problem in past years)

The access points available are a combination of 3com 7760 and WRT54GL
(changing the firmware on the WRT APs is an option), I may buy a couple 
more, possibly picking up a couple N capible devices (not for the speed, 
but for the extra channels to try and releive the RF congestion)

Should I try and put smarts in the APs? or just let them be a flat net 
with one SSID and do everything at the gateway/DHCP server?



So what am I not thinking of?

David Lang
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