I put WiFi 7 in my badminton center

**Riding High: A Scissor Lift Adventure**

As I stood at the edge of the scissor lift, 32 feet above the ground, my natural state was to feel distressed by heights. But with years of experience as a painter, I had learned to overcome my fears and face them head-on. This was, however, by far the highest I'd ever gone in a scissor lift, and I couldn't help but feel a sense of unease.

"I don't think I could be less happy," I said to myself, trying to calm my nerves. "Yes, I could be less happy." My thoughts were interrupted by Andrew, who had been working on construction. "You know what? Good for you. Don't suppose you guys sent me up here with a testing tool or anything, huh?" he asked, chuckling.

I shook my head, trying to reassure him that I was fine. "Yeah, cool, that's fine." As we worked, I couldn't help but think about the testing tool in my hand. It was a simple device, designed to test the strength of our Wi-Fi signal. But it was also a reminder of how far we'd come. From humble beginnings as a small team of technicians, we had grown into a major player in the world of wireless networking.

The scissor lift creaked and swayed beneath me, but I held on tight, my heart racing with excitement. We were about to test our new Wi-Fi APs, and I was eager to see how they would perform. "So while you are testing Wi-Fi seven," Andrew said, "they haven't released firmware with MLO or multi-link operation yet, which is what allows you to connect to like five gigahertz and six gigahertz at the same time."

I nodded, taking mental notes as he continued. "And maybe get like two gigabit over wifi." He paused, a smile spreading across his face. "Very cool. You don't even need a Wi-Spy or a Wi-Fi man, which is Ubiquiti's equivalent product."

As we worked, I couldn't help but think about the significance of our Wi-Fi APs. They were not just simple devices; they were the backbone of our network, providing fast and reliable connections to our users. And with the new U7 Pro Max APs, we had taken a major leap forward in terms of performance and range.

"Other than that, it's very similar to the U6 enterprises, which we have everywhere," Andrew said, as he began to configure the APs. "Yeah, it's like theoretically 20% faster than Wi-Fi 6, kind of out of the gate, assuming the device supports it."

I watched in awe as the numbers rolled off his fingers. "And then once MLO is enabled. Yeah, I've seen results that are well in excess of, you know, two gigabit per second for real-world guys." He paused, a mischievous glint in his eye. "Imagine this, in Wi-Fi, if you're not familiar, it's not like an ethernet cable."

I nodded, following his train of thought. If we could reduce latency and increase throughput, our users would be able to enjoy seamless connectivity and faster speeds. And with the new U7 Pro Max APs, we were on the cusp of a major breakthrough.

**The Wi-Fi 7 Revolution**

As we worked, I couldn't help but feel a sense of excitement about the future of Wi-Fi. We had been testing our new APs for months, and the results had been nothing short of amazing. From faster speeds to lower latency, these devices were going to revolutionize the way we connected to the internet.

"The only real difference is it's Wi-Fi 7," Andrew said, as he finished up the configuration. "Which is flipping awesome." He chuckled, a grin spreading across his face. "Yeah, it's like theoretically 20% faster than Wi-Fi 6, kind of out of the gate, assuming the device supports it."

I nodded, taking mental notes as he continued. The new APs were not just faster; they were also more reliable and secure. With the introduction of MLO, we had taken a major leap forward in terms of latency and performance.

"Imagine this, in Wi-Fi, if you're not familiar, it's not like an ethernet cable," Andrew said, as he plugged in the APs. "If somebody's using it to a certain degree, you have to wait for them to be done." He paused, a thought occurring to him. "That's what makes Wi-Fi high latency sometimes and not so much others."

I watched as he set up the testing tool, his fingers moving quickly and confidently across the keyboard. As he worked, I couldn't help but feel a sense of pride and accomplishment. We had come a long way since our humble beginnings as a small team of technicians.

**The Speed Test**

As we finished up the configuration, Andrew called out to me. "Time for the speed test!" he said, his voice filled with excitement. I nodded, taking my place beside him at the testing tool.

"Let's see how fast this baby can go," he said, as he began to configure the test parameters. The numbers rolled off his fingers, a blur of 1s and 0s that seemed to dance across the screen.

As we waited for the results, I couldn't help but feel a sense of anticipation. What would our new APs do? Would they deliver on their promises of faster speeds and lower latency?

Finally, the results came in, and Andrew let out a whoop of excitement. "Two gigabit over wifi!" he exclaimed, his eyes shining with triumph. I grinned, feeling a sense of pride and accomplishment. We had done it.

As we packed up our gear and headed back to base, I couldn't help but feel a sense of excitement about the future of Wi-Fi. With our new APs, we were on the cusp of a major breakthrough. And with Andrew at the helm, I knew that we would be able to deliver on our promises of faster speeds and lower latency.

The scissor lift may have been 32 feet above the ground, but my heart was soaring with excitement. We had taken a major leap forward in terms of Wi-Fi performance, and I couldn't wait to see what the future held.

"WEBVTTKind: captionsLanguage: enI have a dream. A dream of a sports and esports gaming center with the world'sfastest Wi-Fi,with an incredible whole building audio setup, 4k cameras, and stupid fastfiber-optic networkingeverywhere. To be clear, the dream is still alive, but as you can see, we arepainfully behind schedule.The power is not finished, the data is barely half-run, and they are stilltoday,putting in the boxes that our Wi-Fi is supposed to mount to.And somehow, we are supposed to be soft opening at the end of next month.But we have a plan! With the help of EcoFlow, who sponsored this video and sentover theirawesome new Delta Pro 3 smart battery backup to give us power while we work.I and the Tech Avengers here.Are going to be hopefully solving some of our problems and getting this trainback on the tracks and by hopefully I mean we have toBecause starting tomorrow Jake and I are each going to be out of office for twoweeksTo get 100% completion of this part of the project,we need a rack, two wall racks, nine patch panels,200 terminations, four fiber bays, eight network switches,200 patch cables.Okay, let's just see how far we get.The good news is the rack will at least bea little bit easier than last timethanks to an awesome new technology that,okay, it's kind of like that tool for eating,you know, but like huge.Like a fork.Yeah, yeah, that's how we got it up here.Cool, right?Okay, maybe there's a little bit of movement still.Oh, yeah, it's got to go in that room, huh? Oh, jeez. I just need to get under itOkay, one moment, please. Okay. Wow, are we good? We good? Yeah. Yeah, you'regood. Yeah, buddyAnd now it's on wheels. Hey, thanks Hammond manufacturing. This is part of theirH1 series of data center cabinetsIt's 42 rack units plusThese cool six extra ones on the side that honestly don't even make it that muchwiderWhich should be enough for all the networking, server equipment, and batterybackup that we'll need for our badminton and pickleball businessAnd hopefully esports gaming events, assuming the city of Surrey gets on boardKnock on wood, metal woodSpeaking of networking, I hope we have a plan for all of thisIt's not so bad, some of it's going downstairsWhy did we bring it up here?Thing is, in a building this big, you don't have the option of home runningeverything to the same server roombecause some of the ethernet runs are longer than the maximum supported distanceOne way around this is to use fiber optics, and in some cases where we need veryhigh speed connectivity over a great distancethat makes a ton of sense, but in most situations within this building, itdoesn'tSo instead of us trying to work out how to adapt themFiber cable into every single security camera, we built this closet that is alsogoing to be packed with networkingRealistically, we probably could have crammed a regular floor standing rack in hereBut as someone who has done that in the past in a room this size, it reallysucksAnd this is just for network stuff anywaySo instead we opted for a pair of these Hammond wall-mounted vertical racksThis side over here is primarily going to be for the fiberthat connects this room to the main server room as well as the fiber thatconnects it to thesecond wall for gaming events that we're hoping to be able to host. Massiveshout out by the way toInfinite Cables. When I first heard their name I didn't really take it seriouslybut given howmuch they've sent us for this project I think it might be literal. I think theirsupply of cablesis infinite. So anything on this side of the courts or in the office up frontthat's goingto the server room right over there.Everything else is going to terminate into this little network closet right herethat is smack dab in the middle between the two unitsgoing into a switch which effectively resets our maximum distance.Then we have a high speed fiber link that goes back to the main server room where Jake is.The last piece we need for the fiber side is this UniFi high capacityaggregation switch. It's got 28 10 gig SFP plus ports and then it's got four25 gig SFP 28 ports. These are the ones that are gonna runBack to the server roomthe rest of these are gonna be short fiber patch cables from this to the otherside where we're gonna have all of ourCopper and that's gonna be for our Wi-Fi access points our security camerasI don't know if we have a POS terminal in the concession standThat kind of no not piece of S***, is point of sale. It's the same thingBecause so many of the devices on this side can be powered with their networkcable using PoEWe're gonna be using their Pro Max 48 PoEThis thing is sick. It's got a total of 48 PoE ports32 of them are 1 gig with looks like 8 of them supporting PoE plus plus sothat's higher power devicesIt's got 16 that run at two and a half gig. That's perfect for our Wi-Fi 7access points and thenIt's got a handful of SFP Plus ports that run at 10 gigs. So if we were to trunkall of theseWe could have up to 40 gigs on our uplink hereWhich is way more than we would need. Probably the coolest thing about thisthoughIs that it has RGB lighting and not in like a silly, you know for gamers wayWhat do they call it ether lighting or lighting something like that? It'sdiagnosticso it works best when paired with their patch cords that are clear andtranslucent so it kindof catches the light. You can pick a port in their software and go show me thatone or you can colorall your APs green and your security cameras purple. Since the low voltageconstruction ladsare terminating fiber in the main server room right now we kind of don't want toget intheir way so we're going to be building up the rack in the corner office here.Jake's got all the gear that he's going to be populating it with, kind of laidout here actually, this is not even all of it.There's more.Awesome, so I'm going to leave him to that for now.What he's going to need in order to make sure any of it works, though, is power,which is going to be provided by our EcoFlow Delta Pro 3.We were originally thinking of deploying this thing as part of the WAN Show setso that we could make the ultimate unstoppable WAN Show, like seriously.We could broadcast the entire show off of this thing plus the battery units thatJake has over there.Do you want to bring those in Jake? Yeah, sure.Fantastic.That feels great doesn't it? There you go.Okay, basically they're IP65 rated and we've got a total of 12 kilowatt hours ofbattery in the pack that we've got here.Let us know in the comments if you still want to see us do that WAN Show setup.But for now, this was great timing for us to be able to test this stuff whilethe power to the building isn't fully hooked up yet.So we'll be running entirely off of these pre-charged batteries for today, butin the long term, this has a ton of flexibility in terms of power inputs.It comes with a standard non-proprietary C19 charging cable, and with anupgraded cable like this one from Infinite Cables,it can do up to 4,000 watts max AC charging speed, and yes, supports both 120and 240 volts.It can also get power with solar, direct from your car's alternator.It can use EV charging, it can use your car's 12-fold outlet, and it can evenuse a gas generator.Most importantly for us though, it has a sub 10 millisecond transfer time,meaning that it behaves about like a proper server UPS.So even if the power does go out or, you know, doesn't exist in the first place,our networking equipment should perform flawlessly.And with an output of 4,000 watts, you can even power high wattage applianceslike AC units, water pumps, fridges, and more.Of course, Jake also needs internet, which he's told me is gonna be a bit of an adventure.So while he works on building out the rack, I guess I'm gonna go figure that out.So the server room is way on the other end of that wall, and our internetconnection comes in here,where AJ, from the floatplane/LMG/Infrateam...Everything. Yeah, whatever.AJ is gonna help us get from this box to there.Yeah. - But it's not that simple.No.Because we are running single-mode fiber up to the room.And this is single-mode? - Yes.So everything's great?No. This is a APCSC cable.And we're trying to run it to an LC adapter.But we don't have it yet.So what we're gonna try to do is take this cableand splice it with what Infinite Cable provided,which is Fast Connect kits.And yeah, we'll see how it goes.And hopefully it works and we have internet.So we're just gonna hope that...Even though I've never field terminated fiber before that I'm gonna pull it off.Yes. So I have to getthisOnto the fiber that's in there. YesIt's a fast connect. How the this is fastOh, you got it and it's not long enough. I think no. No, that's fine. That'sfine. That's goodYou know what? This was a practice run. Don't even worry AJ. Do we got this?We're unstoppableYou know the the success chance are very slimWe're trying our best but I don't think we're doing this dude the right way toall the professionals watching this saying heyThey're doing it wrong. We knowWe're just trying stuff. We're trying stuff. You got to try stuff in lifeWhile Linus sorts out that side of the internet,let's talk about this side.For our router and, I mean, controller,this thing does a lot.We're using a pretty new device.This is called the Dream Machine Pro Maxand if you're not familiarwith Ubiquiti's Dream Machine lineup,it's a router, controller, kind of NVR,which is for security camera recording,switch all in one.They also upgraded the CPU.So instead of around 3.5 gigabitof intrusion detection prevention,this one can do about five gigabitand it can firewall and route at full.10 gig which with the little 10 gig ports we've got here should be perfect forour applicationexcept we have not just one but two. Next up is a fiber LGX. I don't know whatLGX stands for offthe top of my head but it's basically a fancy thing to hold fiber cables kind of more properly.You've probably seen us in the past just use a normal like ethernet patch panelwith keystoneswhich works butnot the best because it's not really protected and since we have a lot ofarmored fiber coming in herethey can actually just poke the armor straight into this box and then inside thefiber will spool upin here and be protected behind and all we have in the front is just littlepatch cables. Now thatthe fiber lgx patch bay thingies are installed we can talk about our core switchit's the sameswitch that was downstairs literally turns out the plan kind of changes and allthe fiber iscoming up here so we stolethe high cap aggregation we showed you downstairs and we're putting it up herethis is going to beour core switch so the internet comes into this guy and then all of the otherswitches in thebuilding even the ones downstairs are going to connect into this directly soevery singleswitch in the building is going to look like one big branch off of this one itjust makeskind of management easier so even though we're going to have a bunch of extraports on herewe could use those for the fibers down there we just want to keep everythingthat'saccess like a device plugs into it separate from this core switch just to makemaintenance a littlebit easier and kind of the topology a little bit simpler our stack is droopingour this whole thingis just look at how bad this is i know it's oh i'm actually a little worriedabout that it lookslike it's gonna bend turns out it's kind of our fault we didn't order theblanking panelsthat are supposed to go here and reinforce this if you're not using it so for nowwe're gonna just try and stick the gear in and see what happensif it doesn't work we'll have to like distribute some of the load in the partsthat are betterreinforced and then change it later about a painstaking hour later we havealmost everythinginstalled we've got all of our switches and most of our patch panels andfortunately it'sit's a lot less sketch now i mean it's still a little bit sketch they're goingto send usthe blanking panels which will help that but it is far more stable and the lastpiece atleast for nowis these NVR's.We're using standard Ubiquiti NVR's even though they have a pro NVR that is 2Us.I just like using the standard ones because you can do twoand then stack them together in softwareso that you get the performance of having multiple discrete unitsthey act like one in software, um, and you can fitmore hard drives.Speaking of hard drives we're going to be using these Seagate 22terabytes which seems like overkill and it's because it is.Thanks to Seagate for sending these over we're going to equip each of them with four so we'll have like100 terabytes almost or 90 terabytes almost in each unit that should be quite abit of cameracapacity I don't know if I mentioned this yet but the eco flow has thiswonderful 240 208 volt 30amp plug in the front so we got an adapter this is l14 30 to l6 30 and then wejust hada random PDU which is just fancy term for big ass power bar and we're going to leavethat in the back of the rack for now.Long term we have proper like networked PDUs so we can like turn off a port if we want, if something's broken and not responding to power cycle it,but for now this will allow us to turn things on and try it out.We have 7.6 days of power, oh, we have 32 days of powerLook at that! It's all off battery, thanks Ecoflow!I feel that the eco flowing through me right now. Do you feel it Shawn?I feel something but not sure if it's eco. Oh.If you hit me in the face I'll give you 20 bucksHey, that sounds like a deal.Close?Eh, not bad, eh?Boom.You have no idea how easy this is gonna be.I, for many years, have hated cable managingnetwork racks, but no longer.Boom.Done.Boom.It's managed.It might not be managed well, but it only took seconds.And if I need to change it again, like maybe to do it properly.Boom.Pretty cool, huh?LTTStore.com, which will be linked down in the description,along with links to all the other stuff we installed,which is going to be a very long list at this point.I'd love to do a little check-in with Dan.Yeah.You told me about our amazing, you know, IP speaker system and all, though mygoodness, these are really big.They're so green.They are very green, so they're from SoundTube Entertainment.Who the devil are they and what's good about this?I don't know.Are we doing a test with the speakers today?I would hope so. Do you have POE?I would hope so.There's, there's no, um, there's nothing in the ceiling.We're gonna have these pretty much everywhere, so this is not gonna be the kindof place whereyou know could the owner of a super loud BMW please be less of a jackassare we allowed to say that about Jake if he can't hear us oh probably he'll review the video wownice rack dude look at look at how mint it is there's definitely no flex there's a little bitof flex yeah we're missing the like right the blocking panels i mean whateverbut everything'splugged inand MCM cable managed oh yeah nice we're just waiting for you to mount anaccess point and then did we get to do a wi-fi test yes awesome you should go do thatuh see you later now i've ridden a scissor lift before but i have nevergone this high the ceiling here is 32 feet which is a little over nine metersI meanSolid, right?Now I gotta tell you, I've overcome a lot thanks to my years as a painterBut my natural state is to be quite distressed by heightsHum, and this is by far the highest I've ever gone in a scissor liftOkay, I just, I just wanna hold on to thisOkayI do not like this.Okay, what am I supposed to do?Terminate a cable and install the AP.I am so unhappy right now.I don't think I could be less happy.Yes, I could be less happy.There could be a cactus in my A** right now.While I'm doing this, I would be less happy,but I am pretty unhappy.Andrew, you worked construction.Are you like comfortable with this?Yeah, I don't mind this at all.Yeah, okay.Well, you know what?Good for you.Don't suppose you guys sent me up herewith a testing tool or anything, huh?No, I forgot, sorry.Yeah, cool, that's fine.So the testing tool is just you plugging the WAP.It should light up. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.Okay, WAP has a really different meaning in English now.Don't call it a WAP.She's plugged.Come on, baby.Please work.Hey, there it is.There. Good enough, right? Hey, we did it. Okay, let's get the hell out of here.Okay, please God, for once in your life. Oh, I could have handed it to him in a lessprecarious way. Yeah, why did you give it to me with all these pieces? I just need the phone.Ah, because it's okay. Speed test. Let's go.How fast is it going? 1.3, 1.1.3 gigabit. Damn. Damn. What's our internet speed here? 3 gig. 3 gig, allright.Oh yeah, so you're connected to the same AP as me. You're at, I'd set that to 6gigahertz 320 wide.I only got 300 up. Is our connection symmetric? Yes, but you might be far awayand 6 gigahertz is very low range.Yes, okay, fair enough. Well, I can fix that.We're closer to a gig and a half now download 1.43and my uploads about 550 megabit.I have some bad news.So while you are testing wifi seven,they haven't released firware with MLOor multi-link operation yet,which is what allows you to connect to like five gigahertzand six gigahertz at the same timeand maybe get like two gigabit over wifi.They don't have that yet.All right.Oh, no way.So these new APs, the U7 Pro Max,have a dedicated radio for scanning.So they can scan all the time.You don't have to like pause the wifi to scan.So if you're having wifi problems,you can go pick the AP that's closest to itand see what the hell's going on.Very cool.You don't even need a Wi-Spy or a Wi-Fi man, which is Ubiquiti's equivalentproduct.Now, some of you might have noticed that this is extremely overkill.The fact that we've got four APs out in this warehouse,we've got another one on the mezzanine that we're standing on.But assuming we get our LAN gaming events going,we could have hundreds of people in here.And that's where the additional APs are going to make a big difference.Other than that, it's very similar to the U6 enterprises,which we have everywhere. We love those things.The only real difference is it's Wi-Fi 7.Which is flipping awesome.Yeah, it's like theoretically 20% faster than Wi-Fi 6,kind of out of the gate, assuming the device supports it.And then once MLO is enabled.Yeah, I've seen results that are well in excess of,you know, two gigabit per second for real world guys.Now there's multiple different ways that MLO can be used.And one of the big ones is latency.Imagine this, in Wi-Fi, if you're not familiar,it's not like an ethernet cable.If somebody's using it to a certain degree, you have to wait for them to bedone.That's what makes Wi-Fi high latency sometimes and not so much others.Imagine now you can go, \"Oh, this radio is in use.Okay, let me go to this other one, the six gigahertz band.\"For gaming?Now you have 50 devices that are using your, you know, four by four thing,and your latency is low.Incredible.I'm just curious how much battery we have left on this thing. We still have 92%battery. We've been messing around with this all day.300 watts, 1.3 days. That isawesome.Below 2,000 watts, it's not supposed to go above 30 dB because they have likethis crazy cooling setup.And if you look at the front, you see that grill? Yeah. If you look in thatgrill, you see the fans in there?They're like, there's like two 92 mil fans in there. Oh yeah, look at them go.They look hefty.What's X boost? The app for the one that I have in my car is like super simple.You can't do a lotwith it, but it just works. Oh, so simple. Right, this thing can boost to like8,000 watts if youneed for a little bit, which is kind of insane. All right. The big thing is ifwe had the actualproper plug, we could turn this up to the full 4,000 watts and it'll pull that 208 volt30 amp.Right from the wall. Actually, I think we need 240 volt for that.But for now, if we were just to plug it into a normal plug. Right.Just gonna have like 1500 watts. Or if you have a lot of other things on thecircuit, you could set it to600 watts just knowing that it's gonna take longer, but you're not gonna tripyour breaker. Right.Especially since you have that giant battery cache, if you need to draw athousand watts for an hour or whatever, it's fine.It will just refill when it is lower. Theelectronic strike doesn't fit in the door.What? How does that happen? We don't know. They built it and the strikedoes not fit. For those not familiar an electric strike is a little module thatgoes in here that's powered that allows you to unlock a door with you know a fobor your phone or whatever the case may be. Yeah yeah hey yeah there we go. Okayand so our problem is that this no fit. It kind of looks like it can maybe.When you take this off there's an interior gang box. Here's a plan.We already opened this one anyway, so let's wire it up so we can show the finefolksHow our Ubiquiti access is gonna work and how it will just release this thingand a door will open and we'll just get differentElectric strikes that actually fit in our doors later. We can do that. Nice. I'mglad we're finding out today and not a month from nowShadow mode right? We we know shadow mode. We're familiar. Do we? Shadow mode is taking your unify router slashcontroller slashProtect camera monitoring system basically your dream machineAnd synchronizing it to another one. Now, it's not real-time redundantLike if one goes down just boom immediate automatic failover at least not yet,but what it is. Wait, wait, wait. OhWell, you you didn't let me get it. Did I ruin the surprise? Yeah. OhWell, okay sort of the way that it's set up right now. Yeah, it is justlike a warm spare. It's a warm spare, but in the current like alpha 4.0. Ohcool. You can doautomatic high availability failover. That's awesome. So it wires up exactlylike you'd expect.You have the two cables from whatever your internet box is. The two areconnected togetherand then one from each to whatever switch you have and then boom it just does.Oh that'sawesome. Yeah. Ubiquiti is moving from you know high end consumer slash SMB tolikefor real though. Yeah. Oh do we still have the film on the camera? It's in there. Maybe.Oh you guys you got a cover on the camera. You better make an entertaining faceotherwisethis was all for nothing. Oh geez I was right absolute dork. Is this thing on?Hey not bad.It's not bad actually. All right yeah no I think we're I think we're prettygood. Yeahbut if I want to see the lights on the rack. Well the rack's going to be in themiddle ofthe room. Oh.Like right there probably? Yeah, that's pretty good. Awesome. That looks great.But what about access control?It turns out that the doors that we installedHave all the room in the world for our electric strikesBut the doors that were part of the base building before we started doing ourimprovements are different onesSo we just have to source some different strikes for those but for now we shouldbe able to just like do thisRight. Oh, did you did you lock it? OhOh, I don't owCan you tell me if you're gonna unlock it? I was like, I was showing that it waslockedOf course, it's not that impressive to be able to press a button on yourcomputer and unlock the doorI mean we had that technology 30 years agoWhat's really impressive is that we can use either NFC fobs or phones or even ifyou knowIt's not one that requires authenticationA wave of a hand like for exit. How cool is that right pretty goodThe plan is to have access control on basically every door in the building andthe reason for that is that our goal is to allow members to have 24/7 accessBut only to the parts they're allowed to have access to and that might changeSo if there's a LAN event going on on the one side, right?Then no badminton members do not need to be going in there for security reasonsRight, so no one gets their computer stolen. So depending on what's going on inthe buildingWe could have very different levels of accessfor different people who carry fobs or who have the app on their phone, right?So we don't know how much if any of that is ultimately going to be rolled out,but we wanted to be ready for it and we didn't want to be retrofitting thebuilding.You wanted to have the flexibility to do whatever you want to be able to do.Yes, that makes sense.Flexibility can be very expensive.The camera down here is a different model too, that's the dome.We needed cameras down here that were tamper resistant, like they have a cover,because the turret ones you could justgo up and just move it out of the way. Right. This one has a cover so you can'tjust like screw with it down here.Got it, yeah. I mean realistically we understand there's going to be someshrink, any retailoperation has some, but we'd like to minimize it, we'd like to know who'scausing trouble.We are going to have pretty much a blanket policy that anyone who walks throughthe door is goingto be registered, even if they don't pay for a higher tier of membership. Right.Sodon't imagine that you're going to be coming back.If you get in trouble.The bad news is, we didn't get everything done today.But the good news is, that leaves lots of content for the next vlog settingthings up here.Which is probably going to be speakers.Yeah, I'm really excited about that setup.Yeah.Oh my god, there's so much more to do.If you guys enjoyed this video, maybe go check out the Linus Improves His Houseplaylist.It was this kind of chaos, but on a smaller scale.Yeah, equally as painful.\n"