In what could be the largest, public wireless service in the world, Case Western
Reserve University is opening more than 1,230 Cisco Aironet 1200 Series wireless
access points, providing free Internet access to faculty, students, staff and
visitors to the Case campus and University Circle.
"This is the first phase of blanketing Cleveland with free wireless Internet
access-a project we call OneCleveland," said Lev Gonick, vice president
of information technology services and chief information officer at Case. "We
are working with our industry partners, Cisco Systems Inc. and Sprint, to
complete the Cisco Aironet wireless network across University Circle, providing
wireless
access to faculty, staff, students and visitors who come to the Cleveland
Museum of Art, the Cleveland Museum of Natural History or any of the other
cultural
and educational resources in the University Circle neighborhood."
Adding
to a network already 10- to 100-times faster than most other universities,
this level of connectivity is made possible with Cisco Aironet wireless
technology and the University's Cisco gigabit ethernet and 10 gigabit ethernet
network
based on Cisco Catalyst 6500 Series and Catalyst 4000 Series Switches.
With one of the fastest local area networks built on Cisco networking equipment,
faculty, staff, students and visitors gain maximum mobility and flexibility
as they take advantage of voice and streaming video applications, access
to e-curricula and other University services from virtually anywhere on
campus
and in University Circle.
Gonick said OneCleveland is committed to creating
a seamless, digital infrastructure for the residents, businesses and institutions
of Northeast Ohio. The program's
objectives include empowering individuals for personal and economic opportunities,
Enhancing education and training opportunities for students and adults,
helping cities and counties provide services in new ways, supporting
the delivery
of world-class health services, expanding opportunities for educational
and cultural
institutions and neighboring communities and creating and linking area
networks to take advantage of efficiencies of scale to boost regional
capacity for
these activities.
In addition, design students at the Cleveland Institute
of Art, in collaboration with students at the Case School of Engineering,
are developing global
positioning systems (GPS) applications incorporating text, video, audio
and even speech
recognition, to allow students and visitors to take self-guided tours
around University Circle using their own personal digital assistants
(PDAs).
Return
to the online edition of the 9-11-03 Campus News.