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bolind posted:What’s a good Unifi AP for an office with ~10 MacBook Airs and an equal amount of various smartphones. Heavy, concurrent use from the MacBooks, casual from the phones. Maybe the UniFi 6 Lite will be good; the incoming Apple Silicon machines will have WiFi 6 onboard and they're all 2x2 MIMO so that should work nicely with the 2x2 on the 6. I'd recommend the AC Pro if you were sticking to Intel machines as it looks like Apple will never upgrade the WiFi on those (2020 Intel Macs still only have 802.11ac and 3x3 MIMO only on the 16-inch.)
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# ? Mar 20, 2021 19:48 |
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# ? Apr 29, 2024 05:39 |
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Gyshall posted:I have a primary and secondary DNS server running on my LAN, currently each uses 127.0.0.1 to resolve DNS. If your local DNS server is using 127.0.0.1, that means "themselves" which in turn means, whatever DNS server they get from DHCP is what they are pulling from, likely your cable internet/whatever internet you have's DNS on their network. So if you have Comcast Cable, their DNS server is going to come across in the DHCP reservation as your servers pull an address. If that's fine for you, then it's fine, but they're not just getting the lookups locally from thin air... I think on my local network I have my pihole set to source from 1.1.1.1 and 1.0.0.1, the cloudflare resolvers. Many used to use 4.2.2.1 (Level 3 - they do bullshit now like stuff ads in for NXDOMAIN lookups) or 8.8.8.8 (Google) etc. There's nothing wrong per-se with just using your ISP's though.
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# ? Mar 20, 2021 20:26 |
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Sniep posted:If your local DNS server is using 127.0.0.1, that means "themselves" which in turn means, whatever DNS server they get from DHCP is what they are pulling from, likely your cable internet/whatever internet you have's DNS on their network. So if you have Comcast Cable, their DNS server is going to come across in the DHCP reservation as your servers pull an address. Is anyone other than Cloudflare doing encrypted DNS? I've been using them partly because of that, partly because it is faster than Comcast DNS and is also not Comcast DNS.
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# ? Mar 20, 2021 21:57 |
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CaptainSarcastic posted:Is anyone other than Cloudflare doing encrypted DNS? I've been using them partly because of that, partly because it is faster than Comcast DNS and is also not Comcast DNS. Assuming you mean DoH, there's a decent list over at https://github.com/curl/curl/wiki/DNS-over-HTTPS#Publicly-available-servers
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# ? Mar 20, 2021 21:59 |
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astral posted:Assuming you mean DoH, there's a decent list over at https://github.com/curl/curl/wiki/DNS-over-HTTPS#Publicly-available-servers Yeah, that's it - not a familiar acronym for me yet. Thanks!
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# ? Mar 20, 2021 22:18 |
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I wanted to like Cloudflare DNS, but archive.today/.is/whatever tld they're using this week replies to Cloudflare DNS with bogus A records, as Cloudflare doesn't send any client-subnet information which archive.today uses for balancing. I found NextDNS on hackernews or something and switched to that and it's been working perfectly for me along with blocking ads on my phone.
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# ? Mar 21, 2021 00:01 |
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Sorry yeah to clarify my DNS servers are piholes with nextdns upstream.... I just wanted to see if dns server 1 should use dns server and itself for resolv.conf and the dns server 2 to use the primary and itself for the resolve.conf
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# ? Mar 21, 2021 00:24 |
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Buff Hardback posted:I wanted to like Cloudflare DNS, but archive.today/.is/whatever tld they're using this week replies to Cloudflare DNS with bogus A records, as Cloudflare doesn't send any client-subnet information which archive.today uses for balancing. I found NextDNS on hackernews or something and switched to that and it's been working perfectly for me along with blocking ads on my phone. I'd avoid them as much as possible, they almost certainly don't use this for balancing, but explicitly for user tracking. archive.whatever also returns fake clones of the Cloudflare error and captcha pages (ripped 1:1), they also attempt to tie your resolver back to you and other sorts of creepiness
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# ? Mar 21, 2021 00:26 |
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Mikrotik pranked me hard by adding a dhcp client to any pppoe interface you add. Bizarre and it worked just fine until I power cycled the router and the ONT started telling it to gently caress off. So if you are setting up a mikrotik on a pppoe connection... make sure to remove the dhcp client
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# ? Mar 21, 2021 10:03 |
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Gyshall posted:Sorry yeah to clarify my DNS servers are piholes with nextdns upstream.... I just wanted to see if dns server 1 should use dns server and itself for resolv.conf and the dns server 2 to use the primary and itself for the resolve.conf In a redundant setup you'd want the two servers to only depend on themselves, so the secondary should point at itself for resolution too. It's generally considered "better" to do recursive lookups rather than use upstream forwarders too, but if you're relying on the nextdns blacklists that's cool. It doesn't really matter for a home setup.
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# ? Mar 22, 2021 02:39 |
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Hearing about the shortages has me counting my lucky stars I got an ER-X for $80 CAD only a month or so ago. The SQM has been a godsend with everyone at home all on a 8Mbps/2Mbps connection trying to do everything all at once. Can't recommend it enough for people on a slower connection.
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# ? Mar 22, 2021 04:13 |
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My situation resolved itself abruptly this weekend when my son & his gf found an apartment and moved out. I'll still probably run some cable down the hallway to my office, but not nearly as concerned about sharing bandwidth with just my wife (my daughter sleeps all day so doesn't interfere with my usage).
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# ? Mar 22, 2021 04:56 |
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Martian Manfucker posted:Hearing about the shortages has me counting my lucky stars I got an ER-X for $80 CAD only a month or so ago. The SQM has been a godsend with everyone at home all on a 8Mbps/2Mbps connection trying to do everything all at once. Can't recommend it enough for people on a slower connection. FQ-CoDel is really quite excellent. I've been using it for both upstream and downstream in my 200/10 cable connection for a few years with great results but I imagine it's even more of an improvement on an 8/2 link. I recently upgraded to a DOCSIS 3.1 modem and tested without shaping the downstream since I read that FQ-PIE is part of the spec and wanted to see how well it works. It turns out that it does a pretty good job of keeping the buffer bloat under control (15-25ms) at full downstream link utilization compared to my DOCSIS 3.0 modem (50+ms). It's not as good as FQ-CoDel which keeps it under 10ms but definitely an improvement if your cable provider turned it on. Now I only shape the upstream direction.
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# ? Mar 22, 2021 14:54 |
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I have cable modem/internet question(s): Setup: Cox cable 200/10 -> SB6183(few years old) -> nighthawk AC1900(few months old) I am experiencing periodic god awful connection. Wireshark shows a ton of retransmissions and other crap during this window. This will last for a minute tops then connection resumes as 'normal'. I had cox out and they ran a new line from the street to the junction box and replaced a couple of connectors. They suggested that the problem was the line run inside the house(all RG6U, that i am aware of). I have tried using the modem/router and the modem standalone while using the line in the house and also connecting directly to the cable in the junction box outside the house. With any combination of stuff I try, I get logs like the following from the modem: This particular log was taken after about 2 hours of being connected to the modem/router directly from the junction box. I think steam was going nuts with updates during this time. Is this a bad modem situation? Is it something further up the line? Any other suggestions on stuff to try and/or scream at cox about?
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# ? Mar 22, 2021 18:49 |
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Your signal levels are out of whack. They need to fix that. The uncorrectable blocks are the problem with your line, tons of packet loss. The power level on the downstream channels is too high. Anything less than 15 dBmV should be in "spec" but you really want it around +/- 7dBmV. SNR seems fine Upstream power seems a touch low, but should still be OK. Now the tech might have adjusted the signal to power through a few splitters inside your house, and it's just too high at the junction box. Long story short, show Cox this, and they should fix the signal. Make noise about it, if you make enough noise they'll send the guy that actually knows what he's doing out.
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# ? Mar 22, 2021 19:29 |
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skipdogg posted:The uncorrectable blocks are the problem with your line, tons of packet loss. So If they just replaced the line to the house, and I am connected directly to that, is it something beyond the street connection that's the problem?
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# ? Mar 22, 2021 20:35 |
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Dollas posted:So If they just replaced the line to the house, and I am connected directly to that, is it something beyond the street connection that's the problem? I'm not 100% sure. It's not on your side of things though, it's on them to get you a solid signal to the modem, and if you're plugging it into the outside service line, you've removed everything on your side of the equation. The line might not be properly connected, or grounded. I'm not sure if there's anything in the frequency range that causes interference. I know cell phone signal can affect things in the 700mhz range. There's other ranges that can have trouble as well. Something is causing all those uncorrected blocks. Your downstream power is technically in spec, but is about double what it should be. That could be causing the problem. Call them up, tell them you're having issues and have them check the signal to the modem. Call them on the phone, do not live chat. I know, it's going to be horrible, but you will survive. They may be able to fix the signal remotely, they may need to send someone out again. Cable companies HATE rolling trucks, and in general hate getting support calls, the squeaky wheel gets the grease is what I'm getting at.
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# ? Mar 22, 2021 20:49 |
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SwissArmyDruid posted:poo poo, all this talk about fiber (and my own upcoming fiber install sometime before the end of the year) reminds me that I should really look into grabbing something to replace the ER-X in a few months or so, but the pricing is just putting me off. pFSense or OpnSense (fork of pFSense) are both fine choices if you want to DiY and have something with a lot of power. With both of them you can use any PC hardware with 2 NICs. Both are built on FreeBSD. So if the hardware is supported by FreeBSD it will work fine. My pFSense hardware is a i5-4300U based machine.. its WAY overpowered. CPU usage while doing a 1Gbps transfer never exceeds 10%.
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# ? Mar 22, 2021 21:16 |
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skipdogg posted:I'm not 100% sure. It's not on your side of things though, it's on them to get you a solid signal to the modem, and if you're plugging it into the outside service line, you've removed everything on your side of the equation. I have a tech coming out on Wednesday. In the mean time they gave me one of their panoramic modems to test. A lot more channels, power levels range from 0.9 to 7.2 dBmV (all lower than the SB6183), and the correctable/uncorrectable levels don't seem batshit(yet). Small time sample size, so I'm going to use it for a day or so, but I'm not too keen on renting anything so I'd rather buy my own. Should the modem end up being the problem, what would be a comparable off the shelf replacement? Edit: After a few hours the error levels seem to be a small fraction of what they were with the SB6183 (after a similar amount of time). Dollas fucked around with this message at 02:23 on Mar 23, 2021 |
# ? Mar 22, 2021 23:41 |
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The go to modems these days are the SurfBoard 8200, Motorola MB8600, or the Netgear CM1000 or CM1200 I’d personally spend the extra on a 32 channel modem, which all those are. If you want to save a bit, grab another 16 channel off cox’s approved model list
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# ? Mar 23, 2021 03:38 |
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I've got an AC Lite that I've had for several years and it has been bulletproof until the last six months or so where I've had two instances of the AP degrading in performance to the point of being unusable. That's not a high frequency of occurrence to be fair, but it's also not something I've traditionally associated to Ubiquiti products. Has anyone else run into this sort of an issue? Rebooting the AP takes care of the issue but I'm of the (possibly uninformed) opinion that I shouldn't have to. Wondering if the heat of operation is getting to a component and it's time to replace it.
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# ? Mar 23, 2021 04:00 |
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I went with an MB8600. Log looks a little better outside of a handful of channels. I'm guessing 819 and 825 are LTE related things. Thoughts? Tech is still coming out tomorrow to evaluate whatever.
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# ? Mar 23, 2021 19:33 |
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Martian Manfucker posted:Hearing about the shortages has me counting my lucky stars I got an ER-X for $80 CAD only a month or so ago. Jesus H Christ, I'm late to the party but I decided to pull the trigger on the networking configuration I'd considered a year-ish back. Except now I'm trying to find an EdgeRouter X and find out that it's out everywhere except for a couple of scalpers. After GPUs and PS5s, it's network routers getting scalped. Loving this coronavirus hellworld.
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# ? Mar 23, 2021 21:23 |
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See if there's a Micro Center you can get to and check to see if they have stock on their website, which lists inventory by store. I see 8 in Yonkers, NY, but of course that's probably not where you are..
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# ? Mar 23, 2021 21:42 |
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Jan posted:Jesus H Christ, I'm late to the party but I decided to pull the trigger on the networking configuration I'd considered a year-ish back. Except now I'm trying to find an EdgeRouter X and find out that it's out everywhere except for a couple of scalpers. After GPUs and PS5s, it's network routers getting scalped. Loving this coronavirus hellworld. TigerDirect (lol I know) apparently has them in stock without a horrific markup: https://www.tigerdirect.com/applications/searchtools/item-details.asp?EdpNo=3151391
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# ? Mar 23, 2021 21:42 |
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Mackieman posted:TigerDirect (lol I know) apparently has them in stock without a horrific markup: https://www.tigerdirect.com/applications/searchtools/item-details.asp?EdpNo=3151391 Hah, why not, thanks for the tip. Buying through a dying retailer instead of giving more money to Jeff Bezos is good irony. edit: Nevermind, I got an email update 30 minutes after order confirmation saying the order status is "All Backordered". Guess their system is too ancient to tell you that before you order. Jan fucked around with this message at 22:34 on Mar 23, 2021 |
# ? Mar 23, 2021 21:49 |
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Dollas posted:I went with an MB8600. Log looks a little better outside of a handful of channels. I'm guessing 819 and 825 are LTE related things. Thoughts? Tech is still coming out tomorrow to evaluate whatever. The insane number of correctables on channel 33 was an MB8600 firmware bug, it went away on mine with the latest update. The power levels and SNR across the board seem borderline, though. Hopefully the tech can help.
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# ? Mar 23, 2021 22:07 |
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I've been looking into UniFi for my house to have a bit more control and because my network appears to hate Comixology and Audible for some reason and won't let my tablet speak to them, a problem nobody else on my ISP has. Is there a guide to a minimum basic setup for somebody who probably only needs one AP? Although I do have eight ethernet ports going from my router to devices around my house, so I probably need a switch for that, although maybe getting the switch from UniFi is overkill.
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# ? Mar 23, 2021 22:31 |
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I do appreciate all the replies, thanks everyone. What kinds of things should I look for a tech to do (they've already replaced the line to the house and the connector(s))? When I connected directly to the outside service line the downstream power levels were all 13ish dbmv and the SNR 40-ish. Dangerous webMD-level symptom googling suggests a forward attenuator, would that make sense? I have not yet direct connected the new modem, but I am expecting similar levels. edit: direct connect levels with new MB8600: edit2: upstream power levels are 35ish dbmv, so maybe just a plain attenuator? Dollas fucked around with this message at 23:50 on Mar 23, 2021 |
# ? Mar 23, 2021 23:16 |
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bolind posted:What’s a good Unifi AP for an office with ~10 MacBook Airs and an equal amount of various smartphones. Heavy, concurrent use from the MacBooks, casual from the phones. At least go with a NanoHD over a lite for business use. It's design is specifically intended for this type of scenario. If no Wifi6 is a deal breaker for you I'd suggest going with a a TP-Link EAP660 HD for $20 more. SwissArmyDruid posted:poo poo, all this talk about fiber (and my own upcoming fiber install sometime before the end of the year) reminds me that I should really look into grabbing something to replace the ER-X in a few months or so, but the pricing is just putting me off. I'm not very impressed by Cisco's SMB offering and I'd love to support netgate but I just cant justify the price for their pfsense hardware. There's also the Meraki Go, but it's a complete joke. TP-Link has the Omada controller that looks to be very comparable to Unifi and the ER-605 router is available now that looks like a good alternative to the er-x. They have an ER-7206 that was suppose to be available this month but I'm guessing it's delayed due to all of these shortages, but it does have an SFP port and no MSRP yet. There just doesn't seem to be that many SOHO brands that are offering routers that isn't part of a mesh system. Rand Brittain posted:I've been looking into UniFi for my house to have a bit more control and because my network appears to hate Comixology and Audible for some reason and won't let my tablet speak to them, a problem nobody else on my ISP has. Absolute bare minimum (as in cheapest) is going to be an er-x and AC-Lite AP, if you can find either in stock. You'll need a switch for that many ports though. Recommendation is going to require more information such as sqft and ISP speeds and I don't know if switching is going to solve your connection issues for those two services.
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# ? Mar 24, 2021 00:15 |
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SwissArmyDruid posted:poo poo, all this talk about fiber (and my own upcoming fiber install sometime before the end of the year) reminds me that I should really look into grabbing something to replace the ER-X in a few months or so, but the pricing is just putting me off. Did ubiquiti go downhill suddenly?
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# ? Mar 24, 2021 00:56 |
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brand engager posted:Did ubiquiti go downhill suddenly? They closed-sourced their surveillance products to appeal to more sales channels and pissed off a huge swath of users who wanted it to stay FOSS forever. They didn't give a very good upgrade path either, just "time to rebuy and this time you gotta buy our NVR as well" That's all that i know of, but man people got bent over it.
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# ? Mar 24, 2021 01:06 |
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i believe they also added some kind of obnoxious to disable / no UI option / default turned on phone home analytics to just about everything? edit: lol, when it launched after the blowback they were just like "block trace.svc.ui.com in your fw to turn it off"
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# ? Mar 24, 2021 01:42 |
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Is there any notable difference between the two platforms ubiquiti uses for their routers? I have an er-x (mediatek) and I was thinking about replacing it with an er-6p (cavium)
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# ? Mar 24, 2021 02:49 |
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Rand Brittain posted:I've been looking into UniFi for my house to have a bit more control and because my network appears to hate Comixology and Audible for some reason and won't let my tablet speak to them, a problem nobody else on my ISP has. I have a UDM Pro as the router/switch and a Flex HD for the AP. The UDM pro has 8 ports but one would be used for the AP so it leaves you with 7. It has been pretty solid so far and I haven't really had any issues with it.
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# ? Mar 24, 2021 02:56 |
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brand engager posted:Is there any notable difference between the two platforms ubiquiti uses for their routers? I have an er-x (mediatek) and I was thinking about replacing it with an er-6p (cavium) They have different HW offload capabilities though I guess it's narrowed a bit w/ EdgeOS 2.x. Slight different in hashing algos supported in HW ipsec as well.
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# ? Mar 24, 2021 06:38 |
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Biowarfare posted:i believe they also added some kind of obnoxious to disable / no UI option / default turned on phone home analytics to just about everything? UDM (the Trashcan Mac, non-rackmount one) also demands that you create a Ubiquiti cloud account with no options for local credentials only, before you can access any functions. It won't even function as a dumb switch in the meantime. Combined with their most recent data breach of customer information, and it's enough to put anyone off Ubiquiti. In case anyone was wondering, I've decided on getting something midway up the stack from Netgate.
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# ? Mar 24, 2021 17:06 |
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movax posted:They have different HW offload capabilities though I guess it's narrowed a bit w/ EdgeOS 2.x. Slight different in hashing algos supported in HW ipsec as well. Oh ok I don't think that will be a problem then
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# ? Mar 24, 2021 18:13 |
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Do any of you guys have recent experience with AT&T fiber? I just bought a house and it has an SFP termination box bringing in fiber from the street. The bottom of that box has an RJ-45 connector but I'm not sure if AT&T will require the use of their gateway or if I can plug in my ER-X and be off to the races. I'd really rather not have their gateway in the middle if I can help it.
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# ? Mar 24, 2021 18:33 |
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# ? Apr 29, 2024 05:39 |
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So you don't have to use the gateway but it has it's own downsides, I use the dumb switch bypass (easy to find on google) for it, which works really well however if your power goes out you have to connect the gateway back to the ont for a couple seconds and then you can unplug it again. I suppose a UPS could fix this to some degree but I haven't bothered with that yet, as it's pretty infrequent that we lose power.
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# ? Mar 24, 2021 18:50 |