Telemetry turns software-defined Wi‑Fi into a control loop by continuously collecting signal, client, application, and infrastructure data that can be used to detect issues faster, validate policy outcomes, and drive better operational decisions.
Identity-aware access makes software-defined Wi‑Fi contextual by shifting access decisions from static network placement to policy based on who the user is, what the device is, and what it should be allowed to do.
Dynamic segmentation is where software-defined Wi‑Fi stops assigning broad network access by SSID alone and starts enforcing policy based on identity, role, device type, and context.
Templates and policy profiles are what make software-defined Wi‑Fi operationally repeatable: define standards once, apply them everywhere, and reduce drift.
Zero-touch provisioning shows what software-defined Wi‑Fi looks like in the real world: centralized logic, automated onboarding, and repeatable deployment.
If traditional WiFi management feels like constant firefighting, it’s because most networks are still being run reactively. One AP gets noisy, a neighboring channel gets crowded, a high-density area slows down, and the fix...
Day 2 of our 30-day SDNWiFi series: a practical look at what changes when wireless control moves from isolated access points to a software-driven system.
Software-Defined WiFi (SDNWiFi) is a modern approach to managing wireless networks where control is centralized in software, instead of being scattered across individual access points.In traditional WiFi, each device often makes local decisions, which...
Weekly SDN News Brief: UniFi, Omada, MikroTik, and SMB Network Trends This is day 14 of our 14-day publishing sequence focused on practical Software Defined Networking operations for SMB teams. Why this topic matters...
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