Specifications include, but are not limited to: The Kansas City Public Schools District is seeking to purchase new wireless access point. The district is looking to replace existing Aruba Access Points; AP-105, AP-205, AP-204, AP-275 and AP175p at all District facilities. The District is requesting proposals on implementing new Wireless Access Points at all district locations. The new Wireless Access Points should be compatible with our existing Wireless Controllers (Aruba 7240), Access Control server (Aruba ClearPass) and our Wireless Monitoring server (Aruba Airwave) that are all located in our 2 Data Centers. General requirements Describe the available redundancy models supported by the solution Sub-second access point failover The same software, configurations and product functionality supported across all platforms in the product family proposed. Authentication 802.1x based authentication MAC based authentication The authentication solution must be fully redundant RADIUS support Ability to utilize RADIUS attributes to assign users or devices to specific roles/vlans Access Points Support 802.3at standard Power-over-Ethernet Plus (PoE+) with full capacity operation at full power of radios Capable of muli-function services: data access, intrusion detection, intrusion prevention, location tracking and RF monitoring with no physical “touch” and no additional cost. Classroom APs need to support 30+ users or more High Density APs need to support 50+ users or more Trusted Platform Module (TPM) Aps do not hold “hard configured” internal network information or certificates for authentication to the centralized switches unless this information is stored in a trusted platform module integrated into the AP. Standard Support WiFi Certified for Voice and Data Proposed solution must support 802.11ac Wave 2 AP/Controller Communication Centralized Encryption/De-encryption (e.g. on switch/controller in data center) to prevent wired eavesdropping on wireless user data and malicious attacks on Aps Use of industry standards-based (IEEE or IETF) tunneling protocols: specify standard that the tunneling mechanism is based on.