WHITE PAPER:
Learn about the specific challenges of deploying iPads in the enterprise, how to configure an iPad for a wireless land area network (WLAN), and a specific WLAN solution that offers scalable performance in a high density network -- ideal for the mobile workplace.
EGUIDE:
One area that will greatly benefit from 5G is the Internet of Things. However, 5G is also adding some confusion in the market today as there are existing private and public solutions being deployed now while 5G is a couple years away from adoption. In this e-guide, learn what the impending marriage of IoT and 5G means for the future.
PRESENTATION TRANSCRIPT:
Uncover how to use the right Wi-Fi access points (APs) in your organization to embrace the bring your own device (BYOD) movement without sacrificing the security or manageability of your wireless network.
EGUIDE:
In this E-Guide from SearchNetworking.com, wireless expert Lisa A. Phifer takes a look at the top challenges facing the WLAN environment and answers our readers' top after-implementation WLAN questions regarding issues plaguing today's network engineers.
WHITE PAPER:
Learn about the benefits that fixed-mobile convergence (FMC) and unified communications (UC) offer for both remote and mobile employees and for the corporate IT group, and solutions available to help implement these technologies.
WHITE PAPER:
This paper describes the security challenges network administrators face defining and implementing security mechanisms within diverse wired and wireless network environments.
EGUIDE:
802.11N has solidified and a new product generation has emerged, the time is right for enterprises to pursue broader WLAN deployment. Purchases should be driven by technical requirements that map business needs onto product capabilities. To help you complete that step, we have compiled a list of common enterprise WLAN requirements.
WHITE PAPER:
The key takeaway here is that inter-AP protocols are free, but controllers are not. In a market where all enterprise-class APs cost roughly the same, removing the controller hardware and feature licensing from the equation results in an immediate and extremely significant CAPEX decrease.