Why can't I get a wireless connection...
it's just not working...
One thing I have noticed attending a few events
recently is that the wireless networks have been unable to cope with the large
number of delegates wanting to use it.
A
few years (or even just a year ago) if you attended an event with free wireless,
there were probably just a few of you who used it with their laptops. Today if
you attend an event, you may find that everyone (virtualy everyone) has a laptop
and if not a laptop then a PDA or a phone or an entertainment device with wifi
capability.
As a result the wireless
networks can not cope and if you are late to the event, you will find that
though your wireless laptop can see the wireless network it will be unable to be
assigned an IP address by the router. With a self-assigned IP address your
laptop will the be unable to route any kind of network traffic, so no connection
to the internet.
Generally this happens
because most wireless routers can only deal with a limited number of wireless
clients. The Airport Express for example can only handle ten clients, the
Airport Extreme can handle fifty.
Once
the wireless router has reached the maximum number of clients, then it will no
longer assign IP addresses, and any “extra” clients will not be
assigned an IP address.
Now in theory
what should then happen is that when one of the wireless clients is disconnected
from the wireless network, it should release their IP address and the router
should then be able to assign the IP address to a new client. What usually
happens is that the client does not correctly release the IP address (the laptop
is hibernated or turned off without shutting down properly) and therefore as far
as the router is concerned, the IP address is still in
use.
The solution is to reboot the
wireless router, which in a conference or at an event is nigh on impossible, as
most conference organisers don’t even know where the router is let alone
how to reboot it (turn it off and back on
again).
As more and more delegates at
conferences and events use wireless devices, the more important it is for event
organisers, conference centres and other places which hold events, to ensure
that their wireless networks are scalable and can cope with the number of
wireless clients.
Just because my
wireless router can cope with my home network, doesn’t mean that I can use
something similar in an event or conference context.
Posted: Sun - October 14, 2007 at 08:25 AM
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