I like how you stick to your opinion. There is nothing personal in my comments -- please don't feel offended in any way. I like that you have looked on last Ruckus webinars, I had merely time to look on some recordings only, unfortunately, but I like them -- Ruckus guys as usually know staff quit well and provide it in easy understandable form, which is especially important for new users.
And I have to completely agree -- one client sitting on an AP will have the best performance possible, all for himself. As well as 100 clients distributed to 10 APs, without any interference, would obviously have better performance than 100 clients on 2 APs. This is OK and completely reasonable, and is very correct with lightly loaded networks and clean areas.
Problem is that you usually just never get such situation any more. And if you have 200 uniformly (and heavily) loaded clients in compact area (say, 50x50 m2) and have to decide if you have to use 10x or 2-3x APs, usually 2-3 good APs will actually provide much better overall performance. It is not simple to decide, anyway, as in some conditions it may also be completely opposite -- it may be better having more APs.
Simple explanation is -- you have 3 non-overlapping channels on 2.4Ghz, so adding more APs in same area will just divide same resources between more AP and add a lot of overheads. But as usually, the simple explanation is not correct, as connection speeds for clients have huge impact as well as other factors.
Even more complicated it becomes with Ruckus, as these APs use different antenna patterns for downstream and upstream traffic, and transmission becomes very asymmetric. There is no simple answer any more.
Anyway, having more client supported on AP is usually a huge benefit. This is a typical limitation for SOHO devices, we had replaced during last years a lot of networks in hotels, based on low capacity gear, which became unusable in current conditions.
Most obvious it is in 2,4 GHz, of cause, but 5GHz is getting close, and a lot of enterprise laptops still have 2,4GHz-only cards in our country.
If area is compact and not divided by metal walls, you'll have 3-4 APs on the same channel, you'll have also neighbors, and performance can be actually much less than expected. But it depends on many things, including traffic pattern for clients.
Also some APs would work better in such situation than others (it depends on antennas, primary, but also on hardware and software).
Typical problem recently became that you have a lot of passing-by clients (smartphones), which actually don't want to use your network, but try to connect to it automatically anyway. They can make your AP tables full, if it is not designed to handle it. I had such experience in public areas (especially with open SSIDs), with previous generation Cisco and HP equipment, and the only solution 2 years ago was to replace this gear by working solution from different vendor (surprise?).
We have 3 years old installation with 10x APs producing 200GB traffic per day traffic (and there is about 80 rogue APs around them). Number of associated clients comes to 100 per AP twice a day now, so customer plans to upgrade system.
By the way, in USA you must have even more problems with interference on 2.4GHz as more power and less channels are allowed, but you have much more territory, probably. Also for headquarters with a huge parks around it is really possible to discard any external interference, and have 802.11n in green mode.
It is not the case in our country.
In our office building, there are about 40 companies on 5 floors, even smallest having at least one Wi-Fi AP, and we have 3 multi-tenant buildings in vicinity with a lot of home equipment. Our office list of rogues is 60+ APs, some with RSSI -25dbm. And this is a typical situation, not an exception.
We have just learned in the field during last 3 years that Wi-Fi planning is much more complicated and no webinars or handbooks help much -- you need practical experience, good equipment, you have to try different solutions and you'll get some problems anyway.
There is no going back of cause, and we'll figure how to get most of 802.11ac soon..
Life is life...
Have a good day and as much free of interference channels, as possible!
.