Hey Dave, What would YOU look for in a hotel location? Thus spake David Meyer (dmm@cisco.com) on or about Thu, Mar 01, 2001 at 08:03:03AM -0800:
If someone was asking me I would ask that the hotel had a decent gym and pool, or that these things were a reasonable distance away (not the case in ATL).
Of course, no one is asking me...
Dave
According to Jared Mauch:
Also, it would be nice if the hotel had ethernet in the rooms (in-house DSL or whatnot) or wireless sufficent to cover the hotel.
If the conference moves to larger and larger hotels the wireless covering the whole hotel isn't as possible.
The IETF-49 density of access points was quite nice
- Jared
On Wed, Feb 28, 2001 at 07:26:40PM -0400, Thomas Kernen wrote:
As long as they keep providing power sockets in the rooms for those of us who have laptops that can't survive 4 hours straight on battery.
Thomas
Merit actually has enough access points (it really only takes 4-6 of them... it's more of a user mindshare issue... hence the continuing availability of laptop drops... note however that there are fewer at the recent meeting (ie. we had almost 300 for one room at nanog 17).
the cisco folks used about 24 access points(overkill) for the ietf in sandiego that was enough to blanket the conference center and the hotel below the 3rd floor...
joelja
On Wed, 28 Feb 2001, Alex wrote:
I'd rather see NANOG/MERIT invest in like 15 or 20 base stations, rather than wasting the time/money on the cat5 cable and switches -- etc.
A wireless card costs all of $200 these days... everyone could just get one.
On Wed, 28 Feb 2001, Joel Jaeggli wrote:
On Wed, 28 Feb 2001, Joe Abley wrote:
> > On Wed, Feb 28, 2001 at 08:23:19AM -0800, Lucy E. Lynch wrote: > > Our big costs were US West curcuits into the hotel (6xT1 - we could have > > gotten away with 4xT1) and cable - we had lenghts cut to fit the table > > layout in the ballroom. We had switches & such on hand, and we "borrowed" > > terminal room machines from one of the student labs - > > If these costs were negligible, how much would it have cost? > > (assuming, for example, an 802.11b shot from a hotel to an already- > connected nearby building, donated transit,
we actually tried to do a wireless run as a backup plan, but couldn't find an open conduit, and the hotel balked at the thought of our wiring guys coring 11 floors in order to get to the roof...
I don't think nanog is quite ready to go wireless only in the meeting room although cutting down on the wired infrastructure deployed is something that's been worked on...
> doing wireless-only in the > conference and having some friendly vendor loan the machines for the > terminal room). > > > Joe >
-- -------------------------------------------------------------------------- Joel Jaeggli joelja@darkwing.uoregon.edu Academic User Services consult@gladstone.uoregon.edu PGP Key Fingerprint: 1DE9 8FCA 51FB 4195 B42A 9C32 A30D 121E -------------------------------------------------------------------------- It is clear that the arm of criticism cannot replace the criticism of arms. Karl Marx -- Introduction to the critique of Hegel's Philosophy of the right, 1843.
-- -------------------------------------------------------------------------- Joel Jaeggli joelja@darkwing.uoregon.edu Academic User Services consult@gladstone.uoregon.edu PGP Key Fingerprint: 1DE9 8FCA 51FB 4195 B42A 9C32 A30D 121E -------------------------------------------------------------------------- It is clear that the arm of criticism cannot replace the criticism of arms. Karl Marx -- Introduction to the critique of Hegel's Philosophy of the right, 1843.
-- Jared Mauch | pgp key available via finger from jared@puck.nether.net clue++; | http://puck.nether.net/~jared/ My statements are only mine.