Lost Password? No account yet? Sign up! Why bother?
  • Narrow screen resolution
  • Wide screen resolution
  • Auto width resolution
  • Increase font size
  • Decrease font size
  • Default font size

SmallNetBuilder - Small Network Help

  
Home arrow LAN & WAN arrow LAN & WAN How To arrow LAN Party How To - Part 1: Planning and Power
LAN Party How To - Part 1: Planning and Power Print E-mail
Chris Dickens   
April 20, 2005

Choosing the Venue

Perhaps one of the most difficult tasks when getting a big LAN party started is finding the right facility and location. So many factors come into play that your head may be spinning after a while! But ultimately this is an important aspect of the party that you'll have to stick with from event to event. So be careful who you partner with, and make sure you are comfortable dealing with the people who own the facility.

Here are some key considerations when looking at venues:

Location, Location, Location - Convenience for your prospective attendees is often an issue, so try to locate a venue which is central to most of your target audience. When the party gets bigger and more well known, you will probably have people coming from all over the country. But to get started, a convenient location will be very helpful.

Space - If there's not enough space to seat the number of people you plan to have attending, that pretty much takes a site out of the running. Of course, if the venue turns out to be the largest you can find, then maybe you might consider compromising on the number of people in attendance.

Power Needs & Flexibility - I've seen so many halls that have gobs of space available and nowhere near enough power available to run the hundreds of computers that will be plugging in. If enough power circuits are not already available within the building and you're not able to locate another comparable venue, ask if the have additional capacity on their incoming "switch gear". With the proper hookups, you can contract an outside power rental company to bring in proper power equipment and tap directly into the building power to give you the extra capacity you need.

Sometimes you need to go direct to the Source

Figure 2: Sometimes you need to go direct to the Source

Food & Beverage Contracts - $2.50 for a Coke? Ouch! Yeah, sometimes venues have exclusive contracts with vendors that provide food and beverage for all events in their buildings. But LAN attendees are usually going to lots of events and pinch every penny, so $2.50 for a cola isn't going to cut it at anything but the largest parties. If you want to provide more reasonably-priced food and drink for your attendees, you might ask the vendor if they have a "buy out" price. This would allow you to run your own concessions at a much lower profit margin. Sometimes you will just have to move along if you think this will cause a loss of interest in your event.

Concession stand ready for business

Figure 3: Concession stand ready for business

Overnight Stays - LAN players are night owls, but you will find that a lot of venues will not allow people to stay inside the hall overnight for security reasons. If the venue is your only option, you might consider paying an additional (usually pretty reasonable) fee for security to be on-site during the night. Be sure to have this arranged ahead of time before your event, because they have to locate a guard who is willing to work overtime for you!

Cost - Of course cost will come into play as well, but take this one up with your accountant and find something that you won't lose money on.

If you're running a tiny party, you don't have to go any further than your garage. But be careful, power is an important thing even for a garage party!



Tags: How To, LAN,

Related Articles:

LAN Party How To - Part 2: Building the LAN
How To Reduce Phantom Power Use
LAN Party How To - Part 3: LAN Management and Troubleshooting
How To: Diary of a New Home Network- Part 1
How To: Diary of a New Home Network- Part 2
 

Most Read

 
 

Over At The Forums

Are Cat6 and Cat5e not perfectly compatible?
So, I was rearranging some of my network today (notably moving my router to a different room) and I noticed something very odd. When I...

Captive portal for security
I've read about this in the previous Bed & Breakfast thread. Our company wants to get wireless going on one of the floors. There is only personal...

D-Link DNS-323 Mysteries
Hello folks. I'm having issues with my Nas and looking for some thoughts. 1. The 323 gets recognised by Vista as a network device but...

Gigabit Network Help!
I have a gigabit NAS (D-link 323) that I have connected to a D-Link DGS-1005D gigabit switch. I then have my desktop connected to...

Synology DS-209+ review up!!
Looks real good. Now Netgear needs to play catchup and dump that old Infrant CPU for something more modern and powerful!! http://www.trustedreviews.com/networ...ion-DS-209-/p1

Slideshows

NETGEAR ReadyNAS Pro Western Digital ShareSpace QNAP TS-509 Pro D-Link DNS-343 4-Bay Network Storage Enclosure Thecus N3200 RAID 5 NAS D-Link DIR-628 RangeBooster N Dual Band Router More

Win This!

Enter to Win!

You could win a Trendnet TEW-633GR Wireless N Gigabit Router and two TEW-621PC 300Mbps Wireless N-Draft PC Cards

Learn How!

 

Ldr:0.00173616409302, Rct:0.0405230522156, Sky:0.0443320274353, Tlink:0.120835065842, TopPG:0.120916128159, GQV:0.121053218842 seconds to load.