Is President Obama’s Wi-fi Goal Realistic?

Meru Networks supplies Wi-Fi network at Wielkopolska schools – Telecompaper

RELATED CIOs Await E-Rate Changes In a cost model released on visit the site Wednesday, the organizations sent two recommendations for school networking funding to the commission: 1. Add a minimum of $800 million in new E-Rate funding each year for local area network, Wi-Fi and core wide area network upgrades. This funding should be distributed to schools and libraries based on what each campus needs to bring the network up to snuff. Total: $3.2 billion over the next four years 2. Set aside part of this new funding to cover any schools that overestimated their network readiness. If the commission follows these recommendations, it could make the Wi-Fi portion of Obama’s ConnectED vision a reality by 2018.
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Second, Florida lawmakers have required half of all instruction to be digitally delivered when classes begin in 2015. Most schools have found the best way to accomplish those goals is with wireless networks and more laptops or other portable computers. But many Florida schools will need to be rewired, and districts will have to purchase or lease additional computers. Orange County schools estimate it will cost roughly $280 million to upgrade their schools. Hamilton County schools superintendent Tom Moffses estimates it will cost $3.6 million for the 1,700-student district between Tallahassee and Jacksonville. Some of the funding will be from the state. Lawmakers approved $40 million in the state budget beginning July 1, and every school district will receive at least $250,000. A longer term goal would set aside at least $100 million a year for bandwidth and devices . But most of the funding could come from the federal E-Rate program, which helps schools and libraries purchase Internet access. The program is funded through a fee on phone services. School districts are awarded grants based on need and demographics.
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Report: It Will Cost $3.2 Billion To Upgrade Schools To Wireless Internet | StateImpact Florida

Deployment at approximately 230 additional schools is currently underway. The e-Szkola Moja Wielkopolska e-learning development programme involves approximately 9,450 students and 1,050 teachers. The programme is a joint effort among the local governments of the Wielkopolska region, Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznan and the Nationwide Foundation for Computer Education. With wireless connectivity in the classrooms, teachers and students can use e-textbooks, participate in online lectures and collaborate on projects using tablets and notebooks. The programme also allows students at the middle and secondary schools to participate in 32 separate online lectures in science and math conducted by Adam Mickiewicz University. WLAN coverage design, deployment, integration and maintenance were provided by Advisor, a Meru Gold Partner in Poznan, Poland. More than 1,000 Meru AP1010 enterprise access points and more than 100 MC1500 controllers have been deployed in the Wielkopolska schools. Categories:
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Mtc Unveils Web Service Charged By Time Online Not Data Used

Sony building digital Walkman

Existing prepaid Netman packages are billed by the amount of data downloaded rather than time spent online. Netman Time is aimed at customers who are currently on the Netman Instant prepaid service and who would prefer a billing based on time spent online rather than data downloaded. To move to Netman Time, pre-paid customers should send an SMS reading #Netman Time# to the number 134. Netman Time is charged at NAD 10 per hour. Data on Netman Time is limited to 200 MB per day and is restricted to the customer’s available credit. The Netman Time data speed is limited to 1 Mbps and customers operating on this class of service will not have access to the MTC Happy Hour internet offering.
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In the pilot, Agri-Energia required a demonstration of reliable data transfer between four point-to-point substations. Despite the challenging geography and terrain, as well as the deteriorated state of the MV cables, Corinex technology succeeded where other communication technologies failed; Corinex deployed a High Density Compact Gateway at each substation, in conjunction with its SmartGrid Netman monitoring software, and the solution proceeded to surpass Agri-Energias performance expectations. CTO and Technical Director of Agri-Energia, Narcis Roca Turro, states: Corinex Technology vastly exceeded requested parameters of both speed and latency at significantly lower price than other potential suppliers. Despite of the character of the cables in the network, they managedto achieve a lowest speed of 31 Mbps and highest speed of 107 Mbps within [a] point-to-point connection, whereas required parameter was to obtain speeds of at least 1 Mbps as an acceptable criteria. Also, the required parameter for latency to be under 30 ms as an acceptance criterion was easily achieved, whereas the highest latency was only 9 ms and lowest 2 ms. [Furthermore,] Corinex was very supportive and easy to work with. During Corinex history we have shipped over 12,000 BPL GWYs, said Martin Kominek, Senior Account Manager of Corinex in Europe.
For the original version including any supplementary images or video, visit http://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20131007005028/en/Corinex-BPL-MV-Pilot-Agri-Energia-Exceeds-Performance

Corinex BPL MV Pilot for Agri-Energia Far Exceeds Performance and Pricing Expectations

EDT (1703 GMT) by Rob Guth For more computing stories TOKYO (IDG) — In the basement of the Blue Note jazz club on Monday, Sony President Nobuyuki Idei gave an small hint of how his company will tackle an ongoing war over Internet music. Following a half hour of live music with Tito Puente and his Latin Jazz All-Stars, Sony’s Idei kicked off an announcement of the company’s Super Audio CD with a few words on the evolution of the compact disc. As he closed his remarks, Idei pulled from his suit pocket what looked like a stick of purple chewing gum. “For the network era of compressed and downloaded audio, we have another media — it’s called the Memory Stick,” he said holding the stick up to the light. “With this, we want to introduce a kind of Walkman, or what you might call a Netman,” he said. The Memory Stick is already sold in Japan mainly as a storage device for digital camera images. In the works, said Idei, is what Sony engineers call the Memory Stick Walkman, a tiny handheld device for storing and playing back music. The Memory Stick Walkman would be a next generation of Sony’s popular Walkman portable music devices that could store and replay music downloaded from the Internet. Sony has not announced plans for the device nor shown it publicly.
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Netman arrives home

The new products, which come complete with a cordless phone and a wireless router, offer customers the convenience of accessing Internet from home wirelessly. Netman Home is a product that connects several computers in your home to Internet wirelessly and it gives the user the luxury of cordless voice call functionality and SMS at the same time. Netman Home works on almost every operating system such as Linux, Mac and Microsoft and supports data technologies like GPRS, EDGE and HSDPA, among others. MTC’s Chief HR and Corporate Affairs Officer, Tim Ekandjo, said: The beauty of Netman Home is that it allows you to make a voice call while simultaneously browsing the Internet. According to Ekandjo, Netman Home is another first for the Namibian consumer. It is yet again testimony of our resolve to benchmark ourselves with the international market and to give the Namibian consumer no less than what they deserve, he observed. Latest headlines Another IE vulnerability being exploited He also noted that the product and its pricing structure have been tailored to families, especially parents and students and additionally caters for the businessperson who uses the Internet during the evenings. The product is currently only available on contract with a monthly subscription of N$499.
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Schools Seeking To Upgrade Wireless Network – New Canaan News

“When things aren’t working, it’s much easier for students to become disengaged,” Luizzi said. “Because the focus turns into what isn’t working instead of the content. Focus shifts away from the content to the device.” Luizzi also said some teachers who are experimenting with the wireless technology might be reluctant to try again once students have trouble getting online, especially because it takes a lot of class time. “Ultimately, we’re using it to enhance learning, but if it’s not working, we’re not going to use it,” he said. “It becomes so challenging that the teacher will become reluctant to spend as much energy on that in the future.” The ICT Department is asking the town for $1,156,854 for capital projects for 2014-15. Besides the wireless access upgrades, the money would account for other equipment leases.
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Palm Beach County Upgrades Wi-Fi To Support Digital Learning — THE Journal

These two initiatives placedconsiderable strain on the district’s aging controller-based 3Com wirelessnetwork, which didn’t cover all schools, allow centralized management or supportthe 802.11n wireless standard. The district needed a distributed network architecture that could support therapid growth in mobile devices and e-learning, including support for highdefinition video streaming. The district considered many vendors as part of itsbid evaluation process and decided on a wireless network solution from Aerohive Networks because it wascost-effective, met all of the district’s feature requirements and could expandwith anticipated network growth. The district implemented more than 13,000 Aerohive access points in its schoolsand administrative offices. The district uses AP121 accesspoints in classrooms web link to support a wide variety of mobile devices; AP330 accesspoints in media centers, gyms, cafeterias and auditoriums to provide highercapacity in those areas; and AP170 accesspoints in outdoor areas and sports facilities. The district also implementedAerohive’s HiveManager Network Management System (NMS) in a private cloud to enable theIT team to manage the entire network from a central location. The district’s new Aerohive network currently supports 125,000 devices, anumber that is expected to grow as the district expands its 1-to-1 program. Thesame architecture supports three separate networks within the network: one foremployees, one for students and one for guests. The student network blocks andlimits access to certain applications as mandated by the ChildInternet Protection Act , which requires K-12 schools to filter harmfulcontent. The Aerohive network has enabled the district to expand its onlineactivities. The district now provides larger online testing facilities for allstudents, more mobile devices and access to digital textbooks, as well as accessto e-learning tools such as the Edmodo social learning network and Edline community management system.
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School wireless network not working for 1 of my 2 computers? – Wireless Network – Wireless Networking

Tags: pladpenguin00 February 13, 2014 8:47:41 AM Ok so i am currently using my laptop to type this and i am using the schools internet here at georgia southern. But my desktop is not connecting.It started yesterday when we had icing problems and the internet shutdown. Well its obviously back but my desktop wont connect. The school uses an identity confirmation application to make sure that we dont have squatters on the network. The moment i enter my id and password and press enter, google shoots me an error page that says 1 of 2 things, either the network is down or that there was a connection break and that i should reload the page. well ive reloaded the page and turned off my computer, reset my netgear wifi adapter, run diagnostics on the wifi, disconnected, reconnected, so on and so forth. Im at the point where i dont know what to do on my end anymore and the phone number for the assistance on the other end, no one is there. I assume because we have the day off but i dont know. So im back at good old tom’s hardware looking for some answers.
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