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WiFi courses/vendors recommendation
- Subject: WiFi courses/vendors recommendation
- From: josh at spitwspots.com (Josh Reynolds)
- Date: Mon, 01 Jun 2015 09:31:56 -0800
- In-reply-to: <[email protected]>
- References: <CABgQzT6wVP4kCZuOa9HyufH+KRNmhN=AHJZVb_oERxv-b6STLA@mail.gmail.com> <8078ED370ADA824281219A7B5BADC39B6C6A70E7@MBX023-W1-CA-4.exch023.domain.local> <CAFFgAjDwJRqaacOY_351P1Aa06PQt4jU5yhq_GqMVxbOshUtcA@mail.gmail.com> <[email protected]> <[email protected]>
They come from the outdoor WISP space, so most of their gear is 24v
passive POE.
However, they have multiple models of 802.3at/af switches now (up to 48
port), two routers with 24v/48v PoE output capability, and several UniFi
APs that are either 802.3af or 802.3at.
Josh Reynolds
CIO, SPITwSPOTS
www.spitwspots.com
On 06/01/2015 09:23 AM, Hugo Slabbert wrote:
> Doubt how much PoE you'd use for the MetroWifi stuff, but for the
> "small/medium events Wifi coverage":
>
>>> Ubiquiti Networks.
>>>
>>> Its cheap and it works great. Support sucks though.
>
> Just watch it here if you're expecting to plug UniFi APs into standard
> 802.3af/at ports and get power. When I last interacted with them
> (customer equipment; year or two old, I believe) a lot of their WAPs
> are 24V, not 802.3af/at.
>