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1350 TAC Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. Cisco Aironet 350 Series Product and Software Update WNBU Technical Marketing.

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Presentation on theme: "1350 TAC Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. Cisco Aironet 350 Series Product and Software Update WNBU Technical Marketing."— Presentation transcript:

1 1350 TAC Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. Cisco Aironet 350 Series Product and Software Update WNBU Technical Marketing

2 2350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com 350 Series Hardware Software enhancements Configuration of systems components Cisco’s Next Generation Security Architecture ACU Agenda

3 3350 TAC Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. 350 Hardware

4 4350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com Product Listing AIR-AP35xE2C AIR-AP35xE2R PCM35x LMC35x PCI35x AIR-PWRINJ1

5 5350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com The 350 Uses the Mercury Radio Transmit power is 100mW (+20dBm) Other supported power levels will include: 50, 30, 20, 5, and 1mW Transmit Power

6 6350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com Receiver Performance The redesigned receiver has better sensitivity than the 4800 or the 340 radios (@ 10 -5 BER)  -85 dBm @ 11mb  -89 dBm @ 5.5mb  -91 dBm @ 2mb  -94 dBm @ 1mb  The new receiver also has better multipath performance, resulting in better range.

7 7350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com 30mW Cell Size Comparison 30 milli-Watt client and Access Point range capabilities 11 Mbps DSSS 80-100 feet radius 5.5 Mbps DSSS 100-200 feet radius 2 Mbps DSSS 200-275 feet radius

8 8350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com 100mW Cell Size Comparison 100 milli-Watt client and Access Point range capabilities 11 Mbps DSSS 100-150 feet radius 5.5 Mbps DSSS 150-250 feet radius 2 Mbps DSSS 250-350 feet radius

9 9350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com Environmental Characteristics Temperature ranges Access Point- 0 to +50deg C Radio Card- -20 to +70deg C Extended Temperature Access Point- (Future release as Bridge) -20 to +55C

10 10350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com AC Power requirements Cost of AC cabling is Astronomical As much as $30K for a building like bldg.# 19 in San Jose In line power will reduce this cost. Cisco End to End solution

11 11350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com Inline Power  Source operating current from the Ethernet Port, over the Cat 5 cable.  Line power configuration is compliant with all of Cisco’s line power enabled devices such as switches and line power patch panels.  An optional line power injector is an available option.  Distances up to 100 meters

12 12350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com Inline Power (cont) Can only be used with the 350 series product and not the 340 series. AP350 series responds to the phone- discovery algorithm sent by the Cisco powered switches.

13 13350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com Inline power w/ 3524-PWR-XL

14 14350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com Inline power w/ WS-X6348 Uses the WS-F6K-VPWR Daughter card

15 15350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com Inline power w/ WS-PWR- PANEL

16 16350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com Inline power w/ Power Injector module NOTE: There is NO Phone Discovery circuitry in the power injector. Plugging into the wrong device (I.e 340, PC, etc) means damage!!!

17 17350 TAC Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. Software Features

18 18350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com New Software Features Packet Filtering Options Hot Standby World mode CDP Logging

19 19350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com Setup Screen New Menu Items

20 20350 TAC Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. Filtering and Associations

21 21350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com Defining MAC filters Note:

22 22350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com Setting Default Action for MAC Filtering on the Ethernet

23 23350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com Setting Default Action for MAC Filtering on the Radio

24 24350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com Protocol Examples ARPICMPEcho IPIGMPPing IPXTCPFTP XNSIDPTelnet AppletalkTP4DNS NetbuiUDPKerberos BanyanSVPTime X.25VINESSMTP

25 25350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com Protocol Filtering, Defining Sets

26 26350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com Protocol Filtering

27 27350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com Protocol Filtering

28 28350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com Enabling Filtering Sets on Radio

29 29350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com Enabling Filtering Sets on Ethernet

30 30350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com Association Table Advanced

31 31350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com Association Table Filters

32 32350 TAC Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. Hot Standby Mode

33 33350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com Hot Standby defined

34 34350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com Hot Standby Setup

35 35350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com Hot Standby Setup

36 36350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com World Mode  Client LISTENS to an AP at startup.  AP sends out information with the beacons about its Channel set (frequencies, power levels)  Client assumes that particular channel set criteria  Compliance with international regulations is maintained

37 37350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com World Mode AP Setup

38 38350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com World Mode Client Setup Requires ACU V4.12 or higher, PC Card Firmware V4.13 or higher

39 39350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com CDP

40 40350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com CDP Setup

41 41350 TAC Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. Logging and Events

42 42350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com Event Display Setup

43 43350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com Events

44 44350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com Event Log Notifications

45 45350 TAC Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. ACU Utility

46 46350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com Edit Properties

47 47350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com System Parameters

48 48350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com RF Network Parameters

49 49350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com Advanced Parameters

50 50350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com Network Security Parameters

51 51350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com Home Networking Parameters

52 52350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com Statistics

53 53350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com Status Screen

54 54350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com Site Survey (Passive Mode)

55 55350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com Survey Active Mode Setup

56 56350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com Site Survey (Active Mode)

57 57350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com Preferences

58 58350 TAC Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. Driver Changes/Additions

59 59350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com 95 Install Not the same as earlier versions Copy the Win95Driver.exe file from the Win95 subdirectory on the CD to a floppy disk or to a subdirectory (not the root directory) on your computer’s hard drive.

60 60350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com Linux Driver The installation procedure can be performed only by root users (those with administrative rights) Currently supports version 2.2.XX of the Linux kernel. Leap functionality is supported PCI is supported

61 61350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com Macintosh Client Support Mac OS9.x ONLY G3 Models of the Powerbook ONLY PCI not supported LEAP functionality is supported

62 62350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com Mac Driver Uninstall If customers are having issues with the Powerbook it may be necessary to uninstall the driver and start from scratch.

63 63350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com Using ACU Double-click the Macintosh HD icon on the desktop. Double-click the Cisco pcm3X0 Folder icon. Double-click the pcm3X0PPC icon. The computer searches for the client adapter. After the adapter is found, the Basic Properties screen appears.

64 64350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com Basic Properties Screen

65 65350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com Edit options

66 66350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com WEP Keys

67 67350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com Setting WEP Passwords

68 68350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com Setting Up LEAP

69 69350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com File Commands

70 70350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com Editing Properties

71 71350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com RF Network Parameters

72 72350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com Advanced Properties Infrastructure Ad Hoc

73 73350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com Home Networking Parameters

74 74350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com Status Of the Device

75 75350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com Receive Statistics

76 76350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com Transmit Statistics

77 77350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com Site Survey Screen

78 78350 Training © 2000, Cisco Systems, Inc. www.cisco.com


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