As many organizations are looking at wireless refreshes that include both expansion and upgrades to Wi-Fi 6, those with small, medium or branch locations have some cool (and very useful) new options to consider and should seriously rethink the deployment model.
Historically, small, medium and branch wireless deployments have been an operational challenge for many organizations. Some of those challenges include:
◉ Solution cost including procurement, deployment, and maintenance,
◉ Management complexity
◉ Lack of visibility into the user experience
◉ Limited feature sets, including security limitations, that force a compromise on features in smaller sites to uphold cost effectiveness
◉ Approaching smaller sites as home Wi-Fi setups for lack of better solutions
I wanted to emphasize that size does not matter, meaning that the deployments representing smaller locations can easily represent significant cash flow where user experience is key. I have personally struggled in the past with the need to purchase multiple wireless controllers for sites with 10 to 20 access points.
Today, things are looking a little different for smaller enterprise grade deployments. Cisco’s latest enhancements of the Cisco Embedded Wireless Controller (EWC) licensing model means its easy and cost effective to deploy these smaller networks without the need for a physical or even a cloud-based controller. Some might say it’s a game changer, and for those with small to medium wireless deployments up to 100 access points, it really is.
It is important to note that 100 access points is a large site. In my opinion, most deployments will consist of a handful of access points but it’s good to know the EWC can scale up to 100 APs if needed. Add in Cisco’s recent announcement that AireOS is going into sunset mode and you can see why EWC is a much-needed solution to support smaller sites. It also provides an exit strategy for some of the smaller site controllers like the 2504.
Full featured wireless controller integrated into the AP
As stated earlier, I think it is time to reinvent how we think and deploy these smaller wireless networks. With EWC we have the full enterprise features and management capabilities of a standalone (HA capable) controller(s), integrated into the Cisco Catalyst 9100 series access points. Previous embedded solutions were somewhat cumbersome to use and suffered feature parities, I know this because I’ve used them. With the latest EWC capabilities, Cisco really scored a home run thats worthy of taking a closer look at.
The EWC leverages the same IOS-XE software that runs on the Cisco Catalyst 9800 wireless controllers, so what you get is essentially controller without the appliance or licenses. And beyond supporting Catalyst APs, the EWC also supports many of Cisco’s existing AC Wave 2 access points including the 18xx, 28xx, 38xx, 48xx. While these Aironet APs can be part of the EWC network serving clients, they cannot function as the EWC controllers, that privilege is reserved for the Catalyst 91oo series access points.
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