![]() This information often includes: signal level, signal to noise ratio, signal to interference ratio, and expect physical rates. When you do these surveys using TamoGraph you can do it in one of a few ways: Predictive, Passive, or Active. Predictive allows you to make a best guess to see what the environment will look like before you install equipment. It allows you to load in a floor plan, then quickly add walls and doors of varying materials and thicknesses. You can then place APs on the map and watch the software predict what the signals will look like. If you aren’t getting the coverage you want, you can click and drag the AP and instantly see the results of the adjustment. These obviously aren’t going to be perfect, but it is a great way to create a good working model. Passive surveys are done with a supported wireless NIC. The software is run, you load a floor plan image, set the scale of the image, then click start. It is as easy as clicking on the map where you are, walking, clicking when you turn, then clicking stop once you are done. At this point it will list all of the found APs on the left. You can choose which ones you want to actively see.Īctive surveys are done by loading software on a server somewhere in your network. The client application will connect and run quality tests to the server while you walk around. ![]() Here’s my quick video using the software! This will show you real world utilization information. Once you are done collecting all of this information and are ready to present it, a couple of clicks will generate quality PDF reports suitable for delivery to a client or management. ![]() This summer I’ll be doing a MASSIVE high density deployment, and no less than 7 school design/deployments. ![]() Even if you don’t have the sheer volume of deployments at a single time, there really is no other way to visualize RF.NetSpot for Windows is finally here and it's the first free Wi-Fi survey app for the rest of us. The tool features two major Wi-Fi troubleshooting modes: Discover and Survey. ![]()
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