Using Wi-Fi at the University of Akron: Eduroam vs Roo-Guest
The difference between the Roo-Guest and Eduroam networks remains a
very frequent question from students, faculty, and staff. There are
also many people who connect to Roo-Guest, and then wonder why things
are not working correctly. This document aims to explain that both of
these networks are, and which one you should use in different
scenarios, and give a quick guide on how to connect to either network.
The roo-guest network is a public Wi-Fi network, hence you do
not need to enter a username or password to use it. While it may feel
convenient, this network is slow, and is a security risk. It is
intended for people who are visiting any of Akron's campuses, and are
not from a Eduroam-connected university. Suffering from the same
problem as many other public Wi-Fi networks you may find in stores and
restaurants, Roo-Guest is not encrypted, which makes it possible for
third-parties to snoop through the data being sent and received over
that connection -- which may include your usernames and passwords if
you are connecting to servers or services that are not secured
properly. And unlike Eduroam, Roo-Guest is separate from the
University of Akron's network-based services, so all Intranet-based
services (for example, things on 10.X.X.X) will not work for you on
this network.
The Eduroam network is an international Wi-Fi network that
replaced both Roo-Secure, and the even older Rootown. This network is
faster and safer to use, being that it is actually an encrypted
connection. The encrypted connection still would not make encrypted
or non-encrypted connections to servers or services any safer, but it
still eliminates a large risk point for many people. Since it
requires a username to log in, it also has the drawback of requiring
the user to identify himself/herself before having network access.
Roo-Guest:
-
You are not a part of the University of Akron or another
Eduroam-connected institution.
-
You do not need (or want) access to University resources.
-
You are unable to log in to your @uanet.edu/@uakron.edu account, or
account for other institutions, depending on where you may be a part
of.
-
You like slow speeds and non-encrypted connections.
Eduroam:
-
You are a part of the University of Akron or another Eduroam-connected
institution.
-
You have traveled for some amount of time to any university or
institution worldwide, where Eduroam is available at.
-
Safety (and security) is number one priority.
Roo-Guest:
-
Select Roo-Guest from the Wi-Fi list, and click
Connect.
-
Your web browser will open with a page on clearpasscc.uanet.edu.
Click the Log In button.
-
It will then redirect you to securelogin.uanet.edu, and will notify
you that you are authenticated, and it will automatically take you to
uakron.edu in 10 seconds. Your computer should now be connected to
the Internet.
Eduroam:
-
Select eduroam from the Wi-Fi list, and click Connect.
-
When prompted, enter your institution-provided username
and password. At the University of Akron, this will be the
same as your @uakron.edu e-mail address.
If prompted for
settings, ensure the following are set:
-
Wi-Fi security: WPA & WPA2 Enterprise
-
Authentication: PEAP
-
Anonymous identity: [Leave blank]
-
Domain: uanet.edu
-
CA certificate: [Leave blank]
-
CA certificate password: [Leave blank]
-
No CA certificate is required: Checked
-
Inner authentication: MSCHAPv2
-
Username: Your UAnet username with @uakron.edu.
-
Password: Your UAnet password.
-
You will not see any web browser windows connecting to this network.
Your computer should now be connected to the Internet.
Use Eduroam if you are a University of Akron faculty, staff, or
student, or a part of an Eduroam-connected institution. Use Roo-Guest
if you are none of those.
University-owned Mac users: the Wi-Fi certificate expires every year.
You should use the UA Self Service utility to "check in" (using
the setting found under "Maintenance") every year while either
connected to the local Ethernet/Wi-Fi or the VPN if you are either not
going to be on campus with you University mac frequently, or if you
are not going to have the computer on when the certificate would get
updated. Either solution should reduce the chance of
certificate-based connectivity issues from happening.
Anton McClure /
anton@aperture.nonpaged.com