Santa Fe School District Adopts Wireless
LAN From Meru Networks
Thousands of Students, Faculty, Staff Will Gain Wireless
Coverage Over Next Two Years
SUNNYVALE, Calif., Feb. 7, 2008 – The public school
system in Santa Fe, New Mexico, has begun deploying wireless
local-area networks (WLANs) from Meru Networks that will provide
wireless coverage for 35 buildings and some 14,500 students,
faculty and staff over the next two years.
Santa Fe Public Schools will invest $500,000-750,000 over the
term of the project to extend wireless coverage district-wide to
its three high schools, four middle schools, 19 elementary
schools and various administration buildings. Meru WLANs are
already in use at three schools.
The Meru deployment is part of an ongoing infrastructure upgrade
needed partly to ensure that the district can take advantage of
an array of "streaming video"-based learning materials – from
firms such as Education 2020, CompassLearning Odyssey and
Discovery Education – that are increasingly being incorporated
into school curricula. Streaming video, which sends live or
prerecorded images to users' computers in a continuous stream,
depends on high-quality, uninterrupted network connections.
John Phaklides, director of technology for Santa Fe Public
Schools, said that the highly mobile nature of school
populations, along with the inherent limitations of wired
networks, are driving the move to district-wide wireless.
"The schools are typically older buildings that have only one or
two drops [wired connections] per room," Phaklides said. "Not
only do dozens of students need to be online in a computer lab
at any given time, but there's a community of teachers with
laptop computers who should be able to get onto the network no
matter where they are in the district. In addition, schools have
a habit of moving things around every year as their population
is reconfigured. It's much easier and cheaper to move the lab
down the hall if we don't have wires and cables to worry about.
We expect our initial investment in wireless to be more than
offset by what we save in making these frequent moves and
changes." After Installing Meru, "All the problems went
away"
Before deciding on Meru, Phaklides's technology team had
evaluated numerous wireless LAN products and deployed pilot
networks from some of the industry's biggest names without
success.
"They were having tremendous interference issues in trying to
use their web-based learning software with more than a few
students at a time," recalled Jack Vigil, CEO of
Albuquerque-based Harmonix Technologies, a Meru reseller
partner. "One or two computers in the room might be able to
connect, but the rest were losing their connections and dropping
off the network in the middle of course sessions. They told us
if we could get one school to work properly, we could deploy
Meru in others."
After the first Meru network was installed in November 2006,
Phaklides said, "all the problems went away just like that. At
our largest school, Santa Fe High School, up to 45 people are
online in the lab at the same time, supported by only two
wireless access points. Meru has provided us with the consistent
classroom experience we've been looking for."
He attributes the success to Meru's unique "virtual cell"
wireless technology, which automatically selects a single
channel for campus- or enterprise-wide use, eliminating
interference and the costly, tedious channel planning that
plague legacy networks. In contrast, the "micro cell" approach
used by most legacy WLANs assigns different channels to adjacent
cells of the network, raising the potential for co-channel
interference.
"With our earlier wireless networks, balancing the user traffic
load was a manual process," Phaklides said. "Now we put two
access points in a room and the load balances itself, which
makes the deployment process much easier. And the Meru
controller units can be managed easily through the Extreme
Networks switches we've recently installed."
The initial WLAN deployment uses Meru products based on the IEEE
802.11a/b/g wireless standards, supporting client data rates of
54 megabits per second. Phaklides said the school district soon
plans to begin adding Meru units that incorporate the new IEEE
802.11n standard, which boosts performance as high as 300 Mbps.
Meru's 802.11n products, the AP300 Access Point family and
MC5000 Controller, are fully backward-compatible with the
company's 802.11a/b/g products.
About Meru Networks
Meru Networks is the global leader in wireless infrastructure
solutions that enable the All-Wireless Enterprise. Its
industry-leading innovations deliver pervasive, wireless service
fidelity for business-critical applications to major Fortune 500
enterprises, universities, healthcare organizations and local,
state and federal government agencies. Meru's award-winning Air
Traffic Control technology brings the benefits of the cellular
world to the wireless LAN environment, and its WLAN System is
the only solution on the market that delivers predictable
bandwidth and over-the-air Quality of Service with the
reliability, scalability, and security necessary to deliver
converged voice and data services over a single WLAN
infrastructure. Founded in 2002, Meru is based in Sunnyvale,
California. For more information on Meru Networks and its
products, visit www.merunetworks.com or call (408) 215-5300.