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10:30 AM - 11:00 AM
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Wireless Infrastructure and Devices Theatre
Alan MacArthur, IBM Global Technology Services
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Our experience has identified that providing secure, flexible and controlled network access over wireless environments for different types of users such as guests, 3rd party contractors etc who require more than just Internet access can be a complicated, risky and time consuming process. The ability to allow such users access to internal resources is a growing requirement across all vertical markets, which has never normally been allowed. Over the past 12 months, we have been able to address requirements for guest access, to not only grant provision to an organisations network but to limit their access and ensure their device is free from vulnerabilities such as Viruses, Spyware and Illegal applications, whilst providing a full audit log of the user, their device, location etc. This presentation will give you an insight into customer implementations and the technologies behind the solution.
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11:10 AM - 11:40 AM
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Wireless Infrastructure and Devices Theatre
Marcus Birkl, Siemens Enterprise Communications GmbH & Co. KG
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Whether network managers opt for the draft 11n products, certified interoperable by the Wi-Fi Alliance, or wait for the final IEEE ratification in late 2008 or early 2009, they could face any of these four issues: overloading part of the wired infrastructure; overloading existing older wireless LAN switches; forcing an upgrade to higher-powered PoE; and repositioning and rewiring a number of existing wireless access points. This session looks at how 802.11n high-throughput wireless LANs will affect the corporate network and discusses the impact on existing wired and wireless infrastructures.
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11:50 AM - 12:20 PM
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Wireless Infrastructure and Devices Theatre
David Confalonieri, Extricom
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Applications drive the value and the business case for a WLAN investment. The chosen infrastructure will ultimately make or break that business case. This session discusses the holistic view that must be considered to match the appropriate architecture and deployment models to the application profile of the organisation.
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12:30 PM - 13:00 PM
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Wireless Infrastructure and Devices Theatre
Ben Moebes, Tropos Networks
Torbjörn Wård, Aptilo Networks
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Since its deployment, the City of St. Cloud Cyber Spot has (for the second year in row) ranked #1 by Novarum in their independent Wireless Broadband review. With a score of 5 out of 5 for “availability and 4 of 5 for “ease of use,” it’s no wonder St. Cloud residents and city employees give the service their own rave reviews. Free wireless Internet access is extremely popular with St. Cloud residents. In the second phase the City expanded its use to incorporate mobile applications for police, fire-fighters and other government departments to streamline processes and improve collaboration between citizens and government. Aptilo's ability to securely separate the private side from the public side and give different priorities for the different user groups has been key to this development. The stability of the wireless mesh network from Tropos Networks has been another critical success factor. In this session Torbjörn Wård, CEO of Aptilo Networks and Ben Moebes, Director Worldwide Channel Sales of Tropos Networks - will share their recipe in building a first class Metro Wireless network with a business model that will hold the test of time and reality.
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13:10 PM - 13:40 PM
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Wireless Infrastructure and Devices Theatre
David Callisch, Ruckus Wireless
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For most enterprises today, wireless LANs are either too costly, too complex or both. The basic problems that enterprises want addressed surround making the RF environment more reliable and performance more predictable – wherever users are. But today’s Wi-Fi systems don’t adequately address the things that make Wi-Fi go wrong such as extending range, interference and dealing with a constantly changing RF environment. The two biggest complaints surrounding Wi-Fi is that signals don’t reach and when they do they are flaky. This session examines new approaches and technologies that are being developed to solve some of these fundamental problems. Topics addressed include: dealing with interference, wireless meshing, 802.11n and quality of service.
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13:50 PM - 14:20 PM
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Wireless Infrastructure and Devices Theatre
David Confalonieri, Extricom
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The promise of greater bandwidth has fuelled expectations that 802.11n is the trigger for the so-called “All Wireless Enterprise”. How can the promise be fulfilled for corporate networks, and will that be enough? This session looks at the benefits and implications of 802.11n, and discusses the possibility of Wi-Fi becoming the principal means of network access.
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14:30 PM - 15:00 PM
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Wireless Infrastructure and Devices Theatre
Roger Hockaday, Aruba Networks, EMEA
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FMC marketing is in full swing, and enterprises have expressed a great deal of interest. But so far, the rollouts and uptake of FMC services have been limited. Why the gap? Assessing the potential cost savings of FMC deployments is no simple task, as it involves call flows in the FMC architecture, cellular plans, the form of business reimbursement or payment of cell phones and the amount of inter-site and international calling. And, there is the question of whether users will be willing to change their behavior in order to achieve the desired productivity benefits. The speaker will help attendees drill down on the specific benefits and requirements for deploying FMC. Another important issue is “how stable is the entire FMC system?” The speaker will analyze the current state of readiness of handsets, Wi-Fi interfaces, SIP, handover triggers, battery life, and protocol extensions for mass roll-outs. A thorough discussion of the benefits of FMC will allow a deeper understanding of how, where and why this technology will genuinely be useful in an enterprise.
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15:10 PM - 15:40 PM
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Wireless Infrastructure and Devices Theatre
Peter Mackenzie, Marquest
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Mobility has now become an essential part of many organisations’ working practises. The nomadic and roaming capabilities presented by Wi-Fi would appear to make this a prime enabling technology for mobile working. However, poor planning procedures and weak implementations for Wi-Fi systems have, on occasion, led to poor reviews of this technology in the press and promoted cynicism from network engineers.
Too many wireless networks are implemented without necessary surveys and planning taking place, leading to poor performance, data loss, security exploits and poor connectivity. In this seminar, we will take a vendor-neutral look at how to properly plan and deploy scalable enterprise-class wireless networks, delivering effective services. Focussing on how to avoid common pitfalls made by wireless network installers, this session will describe best practises for planning and deployment of successful wireless networks.
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