Special thanks to 

Lachy Groom and Jordan Gonen

 

for reviewing this post.

Appendix

  1. IDF (Intermediate Distribution Frame). The central point on a building’s floor where all internet connectivity (i.e., fiber, coax cable) comes in and is distributed throughout the space. This connectivity originates from the central point where internet connectivity enters the building and is distributed between IDFs.
  2. A riser is a vertical shaft in a building that distributes networking and telecommunications connections from their entry point in the building (MPOE) to individual floors and suites. A riser manager is a company that leases the MPOE and riser shaft from the building owner. As the exclusive operator in a riser, the riser manager is the only party that can add or remove cables to the riser.
  3. By transmitting data “through the air”, WiFi is susceptible to a lot of failure cases that data transmitted through cables is not. If you need to guarantee a continuous high bandwidth connection (e.g., video calls, high data uploads, devices like security cameras and room schedulers that need to run 24/7), it’s safest to connect your device to an ethernet cable. Similarly, all wireless access points transmit data to and from your IDF via ethernet cables.
  4. Rack size is measured in rack units (abbreviated as U) where each unit is 1.75 inches. One or multiple rack units can hold one piece of network equipment. In this case, the rack is ~6.5 feet tall (78.75 inches) since it’s a 45U.
  5. Main Point of Entry. The physical point at which ISPs deliver a high capacity connection to serve the entire building, where it is then broken up into smaller connections that are distributed to each space's IDF. ISPs are responsible for the network up until the MPOE, at which point it's the responsibility of the building's riser management.