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We're getting in one of these units to see how it goes: https://airtame.com/ Pretty pricey but cross platform is a good feature and if they work reliably then fantastic.
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Hi, we are going to be trying http://www.airserver.com/ on some of the new little Intel PC on a stick units, cost is comparable to a decent Miracast dongle but you get a whole PC to boot along with way more options like multiple devices connected and sharing at the same time.
Haven't got the devices yet but looks really promising.
Sent from my Windows Phone
From: Matthew Strickland
Sent: 5/7/2015 8:02 PM
To: techies-f...@googlegroups.com
Subject: [techies-for-schools] Wireless projecting, AirPlay and Miracast
Hi all,
Do any of you project wirelessly in the classroom? We find Apple TV works great for the Mac's, and Miracast works well for Android/Windows devices, but getting a happy mix isn't as straightforward.
AirParrot makes the Windows device work on Apple TV (outside iTunes), there are apps for Android, or you can install an application for Windows 8.1 that uses your own PC to display from Apple/Android/Windows devices. I haven't tried with chrome-cast because I was more interest in mirroring; projecting everything on the screen, regardless of application.
Students like sharing what they are doing on the big screen, so would like to hear if anyone is using this well across a range of devices.
Matthew StricklandKaramu High School
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Our AppleTVs seem to be unreliable. Like you said about the Epsons. If there are too many they seem to fight. Putting in more and more Hdmi cables as backup. Don't want to vlan or anything just for their sake..
Craig.
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Do you think VLANs would help the AppleTV issues?
If it would it suggests that there might be advantages for other devices to split things up (as presumably there’s too much noise on the network, which is cluttering things up)
Cheers, Julian
Julian Davison
Technical Consultant
Decision1 IT Solutions Ltd
PO Box 368
Dunedin
P 03 471 8232
F 03 471 8234
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E jul...@decision1.co.nz
Yeah we have a flat network. About 20 apple tvs. 600 odd users. All students byod. I'd be interested to see if others have chopped things up to reduce the broadcast domain.
Most of the VLANning/subnetting I’ve seen in schools seems more focussed on a separation between staff and student and wireless (staff wired, student wired and wireless is common) rather than ‘performance’. Though looking in after the fact it’s hard to tell what the ultimate design goals were.
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Most of the VLANning/subnetting I’ve seen in schools seems more focussed on a separation between staff and student and wireless (staff wired, student wired and wireless is common) rather than ‘performance’. Though looking in after the fact it’s hard to tell what the ultimate design goals were.
Cheers, Julian
Julian Davison
Technical Consultant
Decision1 IT Solutions Ltd
PO Box 368
Dunedin
P 03 471 8232
F 03 471 8234
W www.decision1.co.nz
E jul...@decision1.co.nz
From: techies-f...@googlegroups.com [mailto:techies-f...@googlegroups.com]
On Behalf Of Craig Knights
Sent: Friday, 8 May 2015 12:25 p.m.
To: techies-f...@googlegroups.com
Subject: RE: [techies-for-schools] Wireless projecting, AirPlay and Miracast
Yeah we have a flat network. About 20 apple tvs. 600 odd users. All students byod. I'd be interested to see if others have chopped things up to reduce the broadcast domain.
That’s interesting. Is it VLANs that confuse them, different subnets, or both?
If the Bluetooth discovery uses the network for actual communication I presume it’s the lack of L2 connectivity that’s getting in the way, is that right?
Cheers, Julian
Julian Davison
Technical Consultant
Decision1 IT Solutions Ltd
PO Box 368
Dunedin
P 03 471 8232
F 03 471 8234
W www.decision1.co.nz
E jul...@decision1.co.nz
Most of the VLANning/subnetting I’ve seen in schools seems more focussed on a separation between staff and student and wireless (staff wired, student wired and wireless is common) rather than ‘performance’. Though looking in after the fact it’s hard to tell what the ultimate design goals were.
Cheers, Julian
Julian Davison
Technical Consultant
Decision1 IT Solutions Ltd
PO Box 368
Dunedin
P 03 471 8232
F 03 471 8234
W www.decision1.co.nz
E jul...@decision1.co.nz
From: techies-f...@googlegroups.com [mailto:techies-f...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Craig Knights
Sent: Friday, 8 May 2015 12:25 p.m.
To: techies-f...@googlegroups.com
Subject: RE: [techies-for-schools] Wireless projecting, AirPlay and Miracast
Yeah we have a flat network. About 20 apple tvs. 600 odd users. All students byod. I'd be interested to see if others have chopped things up to reduce the broadcast domain.
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That’s interesting. Is it VLANs that confuse them, different subnets, or both?
If the Bluetooth discovery uses the network for actual communication I presume it’s the lack of L2 connectivity that’s getting in the way, is that right?
Cheers, Julian
Julian Davison
Technical Consultant
Decision1 IT Solutions Ltd
PO Box 368
Dunedin
P 03 471 8232
F 03 471 8234
W www.decision1.co.nz
E jul...@decision1.co.nz
From: techies-f...@googlegroups.com [mailto:techies-f...@googlegroups.com]
On Behalf Of Peter Eaton
Sent: Friday, 8 May 2015 12:46 p.m.
To: techies-f...@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [techies-for-schools] Wireless projecting, AirPlay and Miracast
Unfortunately, VLANs interfere with the Bonjour discovery process: devices on different VLANs can't see AppleTVs (unless you do some trickery). Apple added Bluetooth discovery to fix this: when an iOS device and the AppleTV are on new iOS versions and both have Bluetooth on, they discover using this instead of the network.
Unfortunately AirPlay had been unreliable in the previous few AppleTV and iOS versions, but appears to have returned to being pretty good with the latest AppleTV and iOS update so.
Pete
I just don't want to make it more complicated. ..
The complexity added by things like VLANs depends heavily on the makeup of your network, and the existing traffic paths that exist. If everything talks to everything (user devices connect directly to printers, for example) then there’s a greater potential for headaches. If there’s already centralised paths (user devices connect to server, which talks to printer, for example) then there’s likely little difference visible in general operation.
The inherent and unavoidable consequence of VLANs tends to be a requirement to consider what switch ports are going to be used for such that they are configured correctly. Which is less complicated and more of a nuisance J
The complexity added by things like VLANs depends heavily on the makeup of your network, and the existing traffic paths that exist. If everything talks to everything (user devices connect directly to printers, for example) then there’s a greater potential for headaches. If there’s already centralised paths (user devices connect to server, which talks to printer, for example) then there’s likely little difference visible in general operation.
The inherent and unavoidable consequence of VLANs tends to be a requirement to consider what switch ports are going to be used for such that they are configured correctly. Which is less complicated and more of a nuisance J
Cheers, Julian
Julian Davison
Technical Consultant
Decision1 IT Solutions Ltd
PO Box 368
Dunedin
P 03 471 8232
F 03 471 8234
W www.decision1.co.nz
E jul...@decision1.co.nz
From: techies-f...@googlegroups.com [mailto:techies-f...@googlegroups.com]
On Behalf Of Craig Knights
Sent: Friday, 8 May 2015 1:04 p.m.
To: techies-f...@googlegroups.com
Subject: RE: [techies-for-schools] Wireless projecting, AirPlay and Miracast
I just don't want to make it more complicated. ..
On 8/05/2015 12:38 PM, "Julian Davison" <Jul...@decision1.co.nz> wrote:
Most of the VLANning/subnetting I’ve seen in schools seems more focussed on a separation between staff and student and wireless (staff wired, student wired and wireless is common) rather than ‘performance’. Though looking in after the fact it’s hard to tell what the ultimate design goals were.
Cheers, Julian
Julian Davison
Technical Consultant
Decision1 IT Solutions Ltd
PO Box 368
Dunedin
P 03 471 8232
F 03 471 8234
W www.decision1.co.nz
E jul...@decision1.co.nz
From: techies-f...@googlegroups.com [mailto:techies-f...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Craig Knights
Sent: Friday, 8 May 2015 12:25 p.m.
To: techies-f...@googlegroups.com
Subject: RE: [techies-for-schools] Wireless projecting, AirPlay and Miracast
Yeah we have a flat network. About 20 apple tvs. 600 odd users. All students byod. I'd be interested to see if others have chopped things up to reduce the broadcast domain.