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Showing posts from July, 2014

I Guess Apple Wireless Routers Don't Like... Anything?

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I've seen a lot of inexplicable stuff in my day.  Landlords advertising Free WiFi and then telling you to use the neighbor's.  Twitter praise from people whose employer I had just criticized in a blog post.  USC journeyman quarterback Mark Sanchez picked fifth in the entire NFL Draft.  But when I saw that my sturdy Apple Airport Extreme (single radio, dual band, two-stream 802.11n) wireless router was tagging all of my apps as Background traffic, I just couldn't explain it. For those who are unfamiliar with WiFi quality of service (QoS), a quick primer: WiFi Multimedia (WMM) certified devices use QoS protocols from the 802.11e amendment.  Primarily, that means classifying APPLICATIONS (not networks, not devices) as either Voice, Video, Best Effort or Background.  What happens when a device classifies an application as Voice (highest priority)?  Whenever that device is ready to send a frame (sometimes called a packet) from that Voice application the device has to wait l

...And If You Buy That Survey, I've Got Another Survey To Sell You

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I recently got into a little tiff on Twitter.  In part it was an argument about blogging and reaching a broad audience, but mostly it was about site surveys.  Site surveys are hot right now, but I find that surveyors often overlook an important aspect of WiFi: different devices act differently. Conventional wisdom for WiFi site surveys is to get some site survey software , upload a floorplan and start a-surveyin'.  First predictive (letting the software estimate where coverage will go), then active (temporarily mounting access points in the locations chosen in the predictive survey and testing connectivity) and finally verification (walking the site after APs have been installed). The problem with all three types of surveys (predictive, active and verification) is that they are done with site survey software.  Site survey software is great for selling APs or pacifying execs, but it usually requires using a specific adapter.  So every time you verify connectivity or see a ce