Networking & Wireless | News
Aerohive Debuts New Gigabit Access Point
Aerohive Networks has launched an
802.11ac gigabit Wi-Fi access point (AP) that it's touting as an
economical option for organizations that want to upgrade to to the standard but have
been concerned about cost and power requirements.
According to Aerohive, the AP230 can provide high performance at an affordable price and is backward
compatible with 802.11n networks.
802.11ac is the latest industry standard in wireless networking. It offers
data rates exceeding one gigabit per second, greater capacity, improved radio
frequency management and improved performance over the current standard of
802.11n.
The AP230 is part of Aerohive's controllerless architecture — called
Cooperative Control architecture — so schools don't need to upgrade controllers
on their existing wireless network to support 802.11ac. According to the
company, the AP230 also uses Aerohive's distributed intelligence architecture
that helps network administrators manage network traffic at the application
level without causing problems with network performance.
Key features of the AP230 include:
- 3x3, three-stream 802.11ac gigabit Wi-Fi;
- Full functionality with existing power over Ethernet (PoE)
infrastructure;
- Aerohive Cooperative Control (controllerless) architecture; and
- Out-of-the-box application visibility and control.
The AP230 is available now starting at $799 US list. Further information can
be found on
Aerohive's site.
About the Author
Leila Meyer is a technology writer based in British Columbia. She can be reached at [email protected].