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    UNMS vs Unifi for a deployment "today"

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    • JaredBuschJ
      JaredBusch @bigbear
      last edited by

      @bigbear The statistics are just high level at this time.

      The latency & outage is a measure from the unit to the UNMS controller.

      0_1516292410627_918f3217-08ad-4b35-9ca8-feb207361673-image.png

      0_1516292444420_ff23aab3-5170-4754-87c1-55ca33bf90b3-image.png

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • JaredBuschJ
        JaredBusch
        last edited by

        You can click on almost any IP on any screen and it will pop it into a browser window. So if you have rules setup for that, you will be taken directly to the unit's login.

        0_1516292558826_74fc3fa4-c4c9-41a3-aec5-b7c0e2e519a6-image.png

        bigbearB 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • bigbearB
          bigbear @JaredBusch
          last edited by

          @jaredbusch said in UNMS vs Unifi for a deployment "today":

          You can click on almost any IP on any screen and it will pop it into a browser window. So if you have rules setup for that, you will be taken directly to the unit's login.

          0_1516292558826_74fc3fa4-c4c9-41a3-aec5-b7c0e2e519a6-image.png

          The only thing I can see suited to their described needs in the Unifi is the ability to use the web browser or mobile app to remotely look at what is going on with internet access when users start complaining about the speed slowing down.

          I have a Unifi at home and I use the mobile app to block my kids at night, and can see they are on Youtube, etc.

          I have always preferred the Edgemax, only bought the Unifi when I started reading here about the Unifi controller software.

          JaredBuschJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • hobbit666H
            hobbit666 @JaredBusch
            last edited by

            @jaredbusch said in UNMS vs Unifi for a deployment "today":

            UNMS runs in a docker container, unless you like pain.

            OK ..... Time to re-read about Docker stuff lol

            JaredBuschJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • JaredBuschJ
              JaredBusch @hobbit666
              last edited by

              @hobbit666 said in UNMS vs Unifi for a deployment "today":

              @jaredbusch said in UNMS vs Unifi for a deployment "today":

              UNMS runs in a docker container, unless you like pain.

              OK ..... Time to re-read about Docker stuff lol

              Nope, just install a clean Debian 9.1 (or whatever is now current) and then run the UNMS install script.

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • JaredBuschJ
                JaredBusch @bigbear
                last edited by

                @bigbear said in UNMS vs Unifi for a deployment "today":

                @jaredbusch said in UNMS vs Unifi for a deployment "today":

                You can click on almost any IP on any screen and it will pop it into a browser window. So if you have rules setup for that, you will be taken directly to the unit's login.

                0_1516292558826_74fc3fa4-c4c9-41a3-aec5-b7c0e2e519a6-image.png

                The only thing I can see suited to their described needs in the Unifi is the ability to use the web browser or mobile app to remotely look at what is going on with internet access when users start complaining about the speed slowing down.

                Then the IT person can log in to UNMS and see what the overall speeds and such are. If there is a specific issue, they can log into the specific site. But this is a business and this below should not be an issue.

                I have a Unifi at home and I use the mobile app to block my kids at night, and can see they are on Youtube, etc.

                This is not a feature that should be used in a business. It is a business, not a fucking adult daycare.

                bigbearB 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                • bigbearB
                  bigbear @JaredBusch
                  last edited by

                  @jaredbusch said in UNMS vs Unifi for a deployment "today":

                  @bigbear said in UNMS vs Unifi for a deployment "today":

                  @jaredbusch said in UNMS vs Unifi for a deployment "today":

                  You can click on almost any IP on any screen and it will pop it into a browser window. So if you have rules setup for that, you will be taken directly to the unit's login.

                  0_1516292558826_74fc3fa4-c4c9-41a3-aec5-b7c0e2e519a6-image.png

                  The only thing I can see suited to their described needs in the Unifi is the ability to use the web browser or mobile app to remotely look at what is going on with internet access when users start complaining about the speed slowing down.

                  Then the IT person can log in to UNMS and see what the overall speeds and such are. If there is a specific issue, they can log into the specific site. But this is a business and this below should not be an issue.

                  I have a Unifi at home and I use the mobile app to block my kids at night, and can see they are on Youtube, etc.

                  This is not a feature that should be used in a business. It is a business, not a fucking adult daycare.

                  I dont think they intend to use as such other than to figure out where the bottlenecks are while they are occuring.

                  Personally, I dont think there are bottlenecks, I think its the Sonicwall stuff they currently have.

                  JaredBuschJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                  • JaredBuschJ
                    JaredBusch @bigbear
                    last edited by

                    @bigbear said in UNMS vs Unifi for a deployment "today":

                    @jaredbusch said in UNMS vs Unifi for a deployment "today":

                    @bigbear said in UNMS vs Unifi for a deployment "today":

                    @jaredbusch said in UNMS vs Unifi for a deployment "today":

                    You can click on almost any IP on any screen and it will pop it into a browser window. So if you have rules setup for that, you will be taken directly to the unit's login.

                    0_1516292558826_74fc3fa4-c4c9-41a3-aec5-b7c0e2e519a6-image.png

                    The only thing I can see suited to their described needs in the Unifi is the ability to use the web browser or mobile app to remotely look at what is going on with internet access when users start complaining about the speed slowing down.

                    Then the IT person can log in to UNMS and see what the overall speeds and such are. If there is a specific issue, they can log into the specific site. But this is a business and this below should not be an issue.

                    I have a Unifi at home and I use the mobile app to block my kids at night, and can see they are on Youtube, etc.

                    This is not a feature that should be used in a business. It is a business, not a fucking adult daycare.

                    I dont think they intend to use as such other than to figure out where the bottlenecks are while they are occuring.

                    Personally, I dont think there are bottlenecks, I think its the Sonicwall stuff they currently have.

                    Well, the UNMS will certainly show bandwidth totals by port.

                    I will be adding my first EdgeSwitch to my UNMS system this weekend. I assuming some per port statistics would also be available there.

                    brianlittlejohnB 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • DashrenderD
                      Dashrender @JaredBusch
                      last edited by

                      @jaredbusch said in UNMS vs Unifi for a deployment "today":

                      UniFi routers suck horribly. They are just EdgeMax router hardware with different firmware anyway.

                      By suck he means they are a huge PITA to setup anything that's not currently in the GUI in the Unifi Controller software.

                      If your setup is dead simple.. USG could probably work. But if you want VPNs, etc, I'd skip the USG and go ER-whatever.

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • brianlittlejohnB
                        brianlittlejohn @JaredBusch
                        last edited by

                        @jaredbusch said in UNMS vs Unifi for a deployment "today":

                        @bigbear said in UNMS vs Unifi for a deployment "today":

                        @jaredbusch said in UNMS vs Unifi for a deployment "today":

                        @bigbear said in UNMS vs Unifi for a deployment "today":

                        @jaredbusch said in UNMS vs Unifi for a deployment "today":

                        You can click on almost any IP on any screen and it will pop it into a browser window. So if you have rules setup for that, you will be taken directly to the unit's login.

                        0_1516292558826_74fc3fa4-c4c9-41a3-aec5-b7c0e2e519a6-image.png

                        The only thing I can see suited to their described needs in the Unifi is the ability to use the web browser or mobile app to remotely look at what is going on with internet access when users start complaining about the speed slowing down.

                        Then the IT person can log in to UNMS and see what the overall speeds and such are. If there is a specific issue, they can log into the specific site. But this is a business and this below should not be an issue.

                        I have a Unifi at home and I use the mobile app to block my kids at night, and can see they are on Youtube, etc.

                        This is not a feature that should be used in a business. It is a business, not a fucking adult daycare.

                        I dont think they intend to use as such other than to figure out where the bottlenecks are while they are occuring.

                        Personally, I dont think there are bottlenecks, I think its the Sonicwall stuff they currently have.

                        Well, the UNMS will certainly show bandwidth totals by port.

                        I will be adding my first EdgeSwitch to my UNMS system this weekend. I assuming some per port statistics would also be available there.

                        It does not yet, just CPU and latency right now. At least from what I have seen.

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • JaredBuschJ
                          JaredBusch
                          last edited by

                          Fun fact, I have been using UNMS on EdgeSwitch since 1970..

                          0_1518138848179_a1c4c795-a447-4a9a-affc-ae9c49068f03-image.png

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