Solutions
 
 
Wireless LAN White Papers
The proliferation of wireless-ready notebooks, tablets and smart phones continues unabated. This white paper examines the wireless LAN security, performance, management and reliability implications of supporting any-device, any-where, any-time.
 
 
 
Optimal deployment of 802.11n depends on enterprise goals: either maximize coverage at the lowest cost or maximize capacity while future-proofing your network for voice and location services. This white paper examines the different strategies for enterprise deployment and discusses how to take advantage of the flexibility built into the 802.11n standard.
 
 
Many wireless industry spokesmen have made the bold claim that wireless networks are more secure than most wired networks. How is this possible? This paper describes best practices for deploying stringent wireless security, using a sell defined AAA framework.
 
 
New 802.11n technologies require careful WLAN planning and implementation in order to deliver promised range and speed improvements. Ongoing management is also critical. This paper descibes best practices for deploying 802.11n and discusses management application requirements.
The advent of 802.11n enterprise will drive a migration from wired to wireless networks. But is wireless up to the challenge? This paper examines different approaches for maximizing performance and availability of wireless LANs.
 
 
The emergence of Wi-Fi RTLS is having a direct impact on operational efficiency, safety and loss prevention in healthcare settings. This paper examines the benefits of deploying Wi-Fi RTLS in healthcare over other alternative technologies.
To reduce costs and improve medical outcomes, leading hospitals are deploying mobile point-of-care applications that rely on 802.11 Wireless LAN technologies. This paper examines these applications and discusses the challenge of delivering medical-grade mobility.
 
 
 
Two Higher Education institutions provide a blueprint for successfully deploying a secure, high-performance WiFi network on their campuses.

Higher Ed: Tablet % share by 2014
Up to 10%

11 - 20%

21 - 30%

31 - 40%

Over 40%