Our customers use the tool in company environments. Only a few private clients who have the funds to afford it use the equipment. Normally, a private user wouldn’t have the funds to do it.
In Oman, I successfully implemented Aruba Access Points for a hospital with nearly two hundred access points. There were around three hundred users, and the deployment, featuring two controllers of the 7200 series, went smoothly. The captive portal solution worked well, and even after I left, it continued to run efficiently. In Egypt, I replicated the same setup for the largest group of hospitals, implementing seventy-five access points in the first phase. The remaining hundred and twenty-five are scheduled for implementation this year. Despite positive experiences with the technology, there were challenges with the captive portal solution, ClearPass, due to a significant increase in its license cost, potentially from HP, Aruba, or the local vendor. To address this, we explored an alternative solution called Sancfor, a Chinese product, which proved to be effective and cost nearly one-third of ClearPass. The only downside was the local distribution and customer service in Egypt, particularly with Aruba Egypt, which was non-responsive and lacked satisfactory customer service.
Team Lead at a manufacturing company with 5,001-10,000 employees
Real User
Top 5
2023-07-04T03:07:00Z
Jul 4, 2023
We are using it in the office for the Wi-Fi network. We implemented the solution for our office in 2015, but in 2017, we implemented the solution for our warehouse. We have also implemented the solution in one of our branch offices.
Boost IT, user, and IoT experiences with enterprise connectivity that’s intelligent, fast, and secure.
Simplify network operations while keeping everything secure. With a high-performance AP portfolio that covers all sorts of use cases and price points.
I use Aruba Access Points since we need access points in my office.
Our customers use the tool in company environments. Only a few private clients who have the funds to afford it use the equipment. Normally, a private user wouldn’t have the funds to do it.
In Oman, I successfully implemented Aruba Access Points for a hospital with nearly two hundred access points. There were around three hundred users, and the deployment, featuring two controllers of the 7200 series, went smoothly. The captive portal solution worked well, and even after I left, it continued to run efficiently. In Egypt, I replicated the same setup for the largest group of hospitals, implementing seventy-five access points in the first phase. The remaining hundred and twenty-five are scheduled for implementation this year. Despite positive experiences with the technology, there were challenges with the captive portal solution, ClearPass, due to a significant increase in its license cost, potentially from HP, Aruba, or the local vendor. To address this, we explored an alternative solution called Sancfor, a Chinese product, which proved to be effective and cost nearly one-third of ClearPass. The only downside was the local distribution and customer service in Egypt, particularly with Aruba Egypt, which was non-responsive and lacked satisfactory customer service.
We use the solution to present the data sheet and explain product offers. We offer multiple modules as per the requirement.
We have deployed the solution for our customers in multiple distribution centers and warehouses.
I use Aruba Access Points in my company to support IoT network architecture.
We use the solution for official purposes.
The solution is used for medium to high-enterprise businesses and the government sector.
We use Aruba Access Points in our office environment.
We are using it in the office for the Wi-Fi network. We implemented the solution for our office in 2015, but in 2017, we implemented the solution for our warehouse. We have also implemented the solution in one of our branch offices.