 |
Dear Criss,
Wireless is no longer an option for universities and colleges. With a myriad of mobile users, devices and applications, Wi-Fi has become an essential element to providing a better learning experience, remaining technically relevant, and creating more efficient administrative operations. However, noisy RF environments, erratic performance, and unstable connectivity are causing heartburn for higher education organizations.
This webinar will focus on new advances to Wi-Fi technology that increase the stability and reliability of 802.11—while reducing traditional costs and simplifying what have been complex deployment issues. Understanding how these breakthroughs can positively effective operation and a real-world understanding of some of the implementations will be our focus for this educational webinar.
Webcast: Smarter Wi-Fi for Higher Education
Date: Tomorrow, May 13, 2009
Time: 2 PM Eastern / 11 AM Pacific
Sign up today to attend this hour-long session, sponsored by Ruckus Wireless to learn:
- How higher education organizations can migrate to faster, more reliable “Smart Wi-Fi” systems that are half the cost, deployed in half the time with three times the performance
- The ins and outs of 802.11n
- Recent advances in 802.11 technology that extend range and reliability
- What Smart Mesh Networking is & how it works
Real World Case Study: Drew University
A liberal arts university just outside of New York City, Drew University is in the process of rolling out an all 802.11n campus-wide infrastructure. Drew wanted to move from 802.11g to 802.11n without going broke or crazy. Key issues were delivering stable and ubiquitous coverage, simplified deployment, and easier WLAN administration. Learn what Drew learned about how best to migrate to 802.11n at 802.11g prices while maintaining all the enterprise features you expect in a high-end centrally managed WLAN system.
Presenters
- Christopher Stave, director of IT, Drew University
- Clint Bogard, education sales director, Ruckus Wireless
- Eric Stresen-Reuter, technical director, Field Engineering, Ruckus Wireless
Moderator
- Matt Villano, senior contributing editor, Campus Technology
|