INTEL WIRELESS
Wired Stuff
WiFi Tablet Corner
My80211 White Papers (Coming Soon!)

Cisco Wireless Compatibility Matrix (Nov. 2011)

Podcasts / Videos

My80211 Videos

Cisco: 802 11 frames with Cisco VIP George Stefanick

Fluke Networks: Minimize Wi Fi Network Downtime

Aruba: Packets never lie: An in-depth overview of 802.11 frames

ATM15 Ten Talk “Wifi drivers and devices”

Houston Methodist Innovates with Wireless Technology

Bruce Frederick Antennas (1/2)

 

Bruce Frederick dB,dBi,dBd (2/2)

Cisco AP Group Nugget

Social Links
Revolution WiFi Capacity Planner

Anchor / Office Extends Ports

 

Peek Inside Cisco's Gear

See inside Cisco's latest wireless gear!

2.4 GHz Channel Overlap

EXAMPLE 1  

EXAMPLE 2

EXAMPLE 3  

CWSP RELEASE DATE 2/08/2010
  • CWSP Certified Wireless Security Professional Official Study Guide: Exam PW0-204
    CWSP Certified Wireless Security Professional Official Study Guide: Exam PW0-204
    by David D. Coleman, David A. Westcott, Bryan E. Harkins, Shawn M. Jackman

    Shawn Jackman (Jack) CWNE#54 is a personal friend and has been a mentor to me for many years.  I've had the pleasure and opportunity to work with Jack for 4 years. Jack is a great teacher who takes complex 802.11 standards and breaks them down so almost anyone can understand the concept at hand. I'm excited for you brother. Great job and job well done! Put another notch in the belt!

IEEE 802.11a/g/n Reference Sheet

 

LWAPP QoS Packet Tagging

 

 

Interference Types

BLUETOOTH
 

Microwave Oven
 

Cordless Phone

JAMMER!
 

« Meraki Virtual Stumbler | Main | WLC - Cisco LWAPP/CAPWAP QoS Tagging Slide »
Saturday
Feb132010

Site Survey Hint: Attach your WiFi Phone to your Survey PC (VoIP Assessment)

 

 

Having conducted more surveys then a belt will allow notches you start to find ways to improve your survey skill set with accuracy and speed. One of these ways came to me completely by accident one day many years ago at lunch.

If you are new to surveys or perhaps you have a few hundred already under your belt. The common theme to a good active survey is to understand your lowest powered clients and sensitive applications and their limitations. It is also important to understand the environment in which these devices will operate. Then calibrate your survey cards to these lower devices, which can be tricky for someone with limited experience.

There are many decent tools in which you can conduct active site surveys. One of these tools in which I am very familiar with is AirMagnet Surveyor. But never ever assume ANY old wifi card is OK to conduct a survey. In fact, when conducting active surveys you want to use the identical card or one very close to which will be used by your customer.

Example -- If you are surveying for Vocera B2000, Cisco 7921,7925, Ascom i75 deployment you don’t want to roll in with a 200mW card or a crappy chipset and let it run loose!?

When I survey for a Voice assessment I like to use that device during my assessment. Why? Because you know WITHOUT QUESTION how that phone / vocera badge / ascom phone will operate.

When I survey for a Vocera deployment, I will use the badge in survey mode in combination with AirMagnet. I will wear the badge around my neck enter the room, door closed and my back to the door and see what the Vocera badge is telling me. You will be surprised when you see what a pcmcia card reads and what the badge reads! In fact the majority of Vocera deployment failures is due to poor assessments. Thus the reason why Vocera has pulled in the assessment portion for their deployments.

Same holds true for handset deployments with Cisco, Ascom and others. These devices have a site survey mode as well. I will put these devices in site survey mode and use in combination with AirMagnet. Then one day at lunch many years ago I attached my Cisco handset to my laptop! Light bulb went off! What better way to survey and easily see the phones survey readings!

I hope you find this helpful during your surveys as well!

PrintView Printer Friendly Version

EmailEmail Article to Friend

References (1)

References allow you to track sources for this article, as well as articles that were written in response to this article.

Reader Comments (1)

Agree with you, as long as there is a standardized WiFi client base deployed. I find it more difficult to achieve this in heterogeneous WiFi clients deployments such as those found in Universities, College or Schools.

February 13, 2010 | Unregistered CommenterSteve Williams

PostPost a New Comment

Enter your information below to add a new comment.

My response is on my own website »
Author Email (optional):
Author URL (optional):
Post:
 
Some HTML allowed: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <code> <em> <i> <strike> <strong>