http://forums.star-os.com/showthread.php?t=8138Guys, I need some European WISP too... If anyone knows please help me!
All the above. Sector antennae are used for large base stations (>10users), Omni for very small base stations ( <10users) and panel for customer premises equipment.Quick question..
What antennas are you guys using for Mikrotik AP's:
1. Sector?
2. Patch?
3. Omni?
Thankyou
All the above. Sector antennae are used for large base stations (>10users), Omni for very small base stations ( <10users) and panel for customer premises equipment.Quick question..
What antennas are you guys using for Mikrotik AP's:
1. Sector?
2. Patch?
3. Omni?
Thankyou
Hi thereHi Justin,
Yes that was an excellent presentation on your use of Mikrotik and your network in general, very informative, as was the NOG one.
I will be at the next Singapore or Bali MUM, whichever comes first. Will you be doing another presentation?
yes we no longer have a single cisco within the network anywhere, its a good feeling isnt ityeah , cause we don't use another routers , we have about 1200 sites , we installed for them RIC/522C Flat panel .. and with tower's routers
lmaoyes we no longer have a single cisco within the network anywhere, its a good feeling isnt it
NOD32 finds a Trojan Horse on your webpageCroatia
http://wisp.hr/
Can you post here the network topology? I'm intrested în building one.
Trimis de pe al meu Nexus 5 folosind Tapatalk
do the mathwow. am amazed.how can you guys have over 2000 clients on mikrotiks that individually cannot hold more than 50 clients.wow. we would really love to see how your networks are configured.
Can you post here the network topology? I'm intrested în building one.
Trimis de pe al meu Nexus 5 folosind Tapatalk
Similarly in Greece there are many many Wireless Community Networks with the biggest one being AWMN - Athens Wireless Metropolitan Network. http://www.awmn.nethttp://wlan.novagorica.eu/to269ke--hotspots.html
It is not a WISP but free hotspots.
Hotspots in Nova Gorica have long history as the first point was operational in 2003. First it started as an experiment in local students club but after that the network was expanded to other organization, bars and restaurants around Nova Gorica. First the network was called kiWi-Fi network but after we decided to rename it to wlan.novagorica.eu as it is based in Nova Gorica.
Our hotspots broadcast SSID: wlan.novagorica.eu
Most of them is MikroTik.
Thats ingenious. Interesting way to stress test and keep customers happy.I am a WISP and an ISP and a Fiber-to-the-home provider.
As for the WISP part, I operate 200 APs in North Idaho and near-by Washington (kinda in the areas of Coeur d'Alene Idaho & Spokane Washington) . We have between 600 to 1000 Microwave clients. On Average, the wireless portion of my network draws around 1/2 gig of sustained bandwidth during peak rush-hour-high-demand hours.
All wireless equipment is Mikrotik using NV2. Most Mikrotik networks are 5 GHz, 1x1 , nv2 , N-Only , Horizontal Polarity , 3 to 25 km links. We offer 25 meg to 100 meg wireless accounts using Mikrotiks.
Every last weekend of the month, we disable all bandwidth rate limits for all customers. During this time, all customer (fiber and microwave) networks are wide-open go-as-fast-as-possible. Having a 10-gig Internet connection with thousands of customers running without any speed-limits will definitely but a huge bump in your total bandwidth consumption peak rates. During these weekends, most wireless customers can hit between 50 to 120 meg, and all fiber customers are suddenly all 1-gig accounts each.
I do these last-weekend-of-the-month un-limited-bandwidth periods to help me determine any potential problem areas in the network and to locate any possible points of congestion. Then we fix, upgrade or re-configure any problem areas. This helps to keep a fast running network for all customers month after month and year after year.
North Idaho Tom Jones
Re: ... What happens if something bottlenecks/breaks during these unlimited weekends ? ...Thats ingenious. Interesting way to stress test and keep customers happy.I am a WISP and an ISP and a Fiber-to-the-home provider.
As for the WISP part, I operate 200 APs in North Idaho and near-by Washington (kinda in the areas of Coeur d'Alene Idaho & Spokane Washington) . We have between 600 to 1000 Microwave clients. On Average, the wireless portion of my network draws around 1/2 gig of sustained bandwidth during peak rush-hour-high-demand hours.
All wireless equipment is Mikrotik using NV2. Most Mikrotik networks are 5 GHz, 1x1 , nv2 , N-Only , Horizontal Polarity , 3 to 25 km links. We offer 25 meg to 100 meg wireless accounts using Mikrotiks.
Every last weekend of the month, we disable all bandwidth rate limits for all customers. During this time, all customer (fiber and microwave) networks are wide-open go-as-fast-as-possible. Having a 10-gig Internet connection with thousands of customers running without any speed-limits will definitely but a huge bump in your total bandwidth consumption peak rates. During these weekends, most wireless customers can hit between 50 to 120 meg, and all fiber customers are suddenly all 1-gig accounts each.
I do these last-weekend-of-the-month un-limited-bandwidth periods to help me determine any potential problem areas in the network and to locate any possible points of congestion. Then we fix, upgrade or re-configure any problem areas. This helps to keep a fast running network for all customers month after month and year after year.
North Idaho Tom Jones
What happens if something bottlenecks/breaks during these unlimited weekends?
That's an excellent idea. I got curious: do You see a huge increase in traffic, beyond the expected? I mean: are the users aware of this "download from heavens" window, and scheduling his activities to match it?Every last weekend of the month, we disable all bandwidth rate limits for all customers. During this time, all customer (fiber and microwave) networks are wide-open go-as-fast-as-possible. Having a 10-gig Internet connection with thousands of customers running without any speed-limits will definitely but a huge bump in your total bandwidth consumption peak rates. During these weekends, most wireless customers can hit between 50 to 120 meg, and all fiber customers are suddenly all 1-gig accounts each.
North Idaho Tom Jones
re: ... You see a huge increase in traffic, beyond the expected? ...That's an excellent idea. I got curious: do You see a huge increase in traffic, beyond the expected? I mean: are the users aware of this "download from heavens" window, and scheduling his activities to match it?Every last weekend of the month, we disable all bandwidth rate limits for all customers. During this time, all customer (fiber and microwave) networks are wide-open go-as-fast-as-possible. Having a 10-gig Internet connection with thousands of customers running without any speed-limits will definitely but a huge bump in your total bandwidth consumption peak rates. During these weekends, most wireless customers can hit between 50 to 120 meg, and all fiber customers are suddenly all 1-gig accounts each.
North Idaho Tom Jones
which devices are most commonly used for P2P link?Our network TELEMPIRE. Rusiia. Moscow and Kaluga regions, 1000+ clients, 100% Mikrotik.
LHG 5 and Disc Lite5which devices are most commonly used for P2P link?Our network TELEMPIRE. Rusiia. Moscow and Kaluga regions, 1000+ clients, 100% Mikrotik.