Unnamed Administration sources reported that Daniel Golding said:
At this last NANOG, it seemed that the geometry, rather than just the size, of the hotel made covering even a small portion of rooms extremely difficult. The bar coverage was certainly nice. Interestingly, the Merit folks had far more wireless access points than they actually used at this last NANOG. The biggest problem was getting wired connectivity to all the places that access points were needed. The Sheraton was a very old hotel with primitive wiring. This may be easier at hotels of more recent vintage. Which may be a lesson learned for future hosts.
I worked the DC IETF-46 terminal room. I don't think many attendees realized what NorTel went through to get all those rooms on line. The building is roughly "X" shaped. There was no way around the base of the hotel, due to construction. They put a fiber switch on the room and dropped 4 heavy duty fiber bundles down 12 stories, one on each "face" of the X. Then we ran fiber or CAT 5 in windows/shafts/you name it on each "face" to get to each room. Each had a switch to feed laptop and 3 wireless nets. To make life more interesting, the hotel was being recarpeted, so many hallways were blocked; and the doors to the terminal room fell off in the process. So they had a guard sitting there all night, every night. I've never worked so hard for a free t-shirt in my life. -- A host is a host from coast to coast.................wb8foz@nrk.com & no one will talk to a host that's close........[v].(301) 56-LINUX Unless the host (that isn't close).........................pob 1433 is busy, hung or dead....................................20915-1433