Episode 75 — Roaming Behavior: sticky clients, disassociation, and user impact

Roaming behavior is a frequent CloudNetX topic because user mobility exposes weaknesses in wireless design that remain hidden when devices stay stationary. This episode defines roaming as the process by which a client device transitions between access points while maintaining connectivity, and it explains that roaming is often driven by client decisions influenced by signal strength, noise, and network settings. The first paragraph focuses on two common scenario signals: sticky clients that remain attached to a weak access point too long and disassociation events that force sessions to drop and reconnect. It explains why sticky clients reduce performance even when better coverage exists and why disassociations damage real-time applications and user trust. The episode also frames roaming as a coordinated outcome of placement, transmit power planning, authentication behavior, and channel strategy, not as a single “roaming feature.”
Episode 75 — Roaming Behavior: sticky clients, disassociation, and user impact
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