| Will Mesh Revolutionize Wireless Networks? |
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| Written by Bob Jordan | Hits : 87
| Monday, 12 July 2004 00:00 |
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Mesh networks--Netlike communications network sin which there are at least two pathways to each node--are not new, but they present new opportunities and challenges to owners of wireless networks
Wireless networks are infiltrating organizations around the globe, particularly in the United States. Industry after industry is finding new and attractive business benefits to unwiring. The hospitality industry is one example. According to Pyramid Research, about 6,000 hotels worldwide are expected to offer wireless access to their guests by the end of this year. Generally, the cost to deploy a traditional wireless network to provide guest broadband access to each room is about half that of a wired network. Organizations, including hotels, have been able to further reduce costs by
implementing a wireless mesh network that not only eliminates the time and expenses
of most Ethernet wiring but also allows the network to be accessed in all areas
of a building. Structured Wireless Some IT planning consultants view wireless LANs as simply a feature of the wired network, or as a logical extension of the wires. Nothing could be farther from the truth. Instead of simply extending the IT strategy to include wireless, the smart planner takes advantage of structured wireless as an opportunity to exploit fundamental differences in the technologies with a resulting payoff to the business. First, there is the potential for wire replacement with its savings in capital and operating expenses. Second, structured wireless removes restrictions on employee mobility, placing people at the site of data and fundamentally improving business processes. The thoughtful IT planner must also devise risk mitigation strategies. For example, mobility comes at a price--the physical port no longer defines the user. This creates the need for fundamentally different access and security policies. Well-designed structured wireless systems include the required tools to mitigate risks and eliminate worries. Reduced Costs The potential for wire replacement is dramatic. A medium-sized building with 150 users and approximately 50,000 square feet requires nearly five miles of cabling to wire every user. Traditional wireless LAN equipment, be it standalone access points or switched gear, requires about one-half mile of cabling. A mesh network needs only three feet--a dramatic change in the cost to deploy a network. And when it comes to daily operations--moves, adds and changes--a wireless mesh can cost up to 98 percent less than its wired counterpart. Clearly in-building wires will not disappear, as they provide speed advantages for large file transfers or demanding applications, such as computer aided design tools. But an IT strategy must allow for wireless integration and for capturing cost savings wherever possible. For example, a structured wireless network can cross the road--without a trench or permit--to connect multiple in-building systems. And it enables wireless nodes to be placed anywhere users require broadband access but wires cannot reach--such as in the middle of a factory floor, car dealership lot or outdoor transportation yard. Improving the technology The no-wires aspect of a wireless mesh eliminates the restrictions of specific desks or offices. Instead, structured wireless gives network access to users in conference rooms, shop floors, inventory yards, and related campus buildings. With a remote edge node and a wireless backhaul, business continuity can be maintained even when buildings are evacuated. In short, the notion of ¡°network¡± can be redefined around the business need, work operations, the data, and the employees without regard for wired port locations. This expands the reach of benefits, for example enabling data entry at the point of origin, elimination of errors from handwriting, and immediate cross-correlation of data to avoid adverse affects or to match orders and inventory. Traditional wireless solutions often cannot reach all of the point-of-origin data sites, leaving physical gaps in coverage and logical gaps in the process. Structured wireless, by design, extends beyond the reach of wired ports. Easing IT Management Worries By design, a structured wireless network is an engineered system. A properly designed managed mesh secures itself, assuring automatic authentication and encryption over the wireless mesh links. The control software continually scans the environment and selects the best combination of radio channels and available links to maintain optimum performance end-to-end. And, by design, a structured wireless network includes its own management and
security tools while drawing upon resources available in the wired network to
avoid duplication. For example, a structured wireless network could employ standard Microsoft XP clients in laptop computers, along with the authentication and authorization facilities available in Microsoft Server 2003. Mobile users can be administered with the same login and password, and receive the same privileges, on both the wired and the wireless networks, providing a seamless integration from the user¡¯s point of view. All the while, the IT manager maintains strict control of access to both the network and the corporate files. It began when early users introduced rogue access points to unhook themselves from their desks. It evolved into today¡¯s new IT strategic plan that redefines the network to embrace mobile users, frees the users from a dependence on wired ports, and works backwards from business needs to control mechanisms. Welcome aboard.
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