New ISP Issues at CEO's Home
-
OP is just lucky the CEO doesn't want to get a point-to-point connection to the office instead.
-
@flaxking said in New ISP Issues at CEO's Home:
OP is just lucky the CEO doesn't want to get a point-to-point connection to the office instead.
That would have been simple, really.
-
@scottalanmiller said in New ISP Issues at CEO's Home:
@flaxking said in New ISP Issues at CEO's Home:
OP is just lucky the CEO doesn't want to get a point-to-point connection to the office instead.
That would have been simple, really.
Depends if the OP has to become the company's de facto tower installer.
-
@flaxking said in New ISP Issues at CEO's Home:
@scottalanmiller said in New ISP Issues at CEO's Home:
@flaxking said in New ISP Issues at CEO's Home:
OP is just lucky the CEO doesn't want to get a point-to-point connection to the office instead.
That would have been simple, really.
Depends if the OP has to become the company's de facto tower installer.
You just call up the local ISP and have them run the line. In any case, it's something you have to contract out. That it would cost a fortune doesn't come from his pocket, that it requires right of ways or permits or whatever, just things he orders, not things he does. Would be much less work than this.
-
It's like if my customer demands that I build them a datacenter. Sure, building a datacenter is a huge amount of work, but I don't do that work. I just call up a datacenter contractor and tell them how big it needs to be.
-
@scottalanmiller said in New ISP Issues at CEO's Home:
@flaxking said in New ISP Issues at CEO's Home:
@scottalanmiller said in New ISP Issues at CEO's Home:
@flaxking said in New ISP Issues at CEO's Home:
OP is just lucky the CEO doesn't want to get a point-to-point connection to the office instead.
That would have been simple, really.
Depends if the OP has to become the company's de facto tower installer.
You just call up the local ISP and have them run the line. In any case, it's something you have to contract out. That it would cost a fortune doesn't come from his pocket, that it requires right of ways or permits or whatever, just things he orders, not things he does. Would be much less work than this.
I was thinking wireless, but your comment still applies regardless.
-
@scottalanmiller said in New ISP Issues at CEO's Home:
It's like if my customer demands that I build them a datacenter. Sure, building a datacenter is a huge amount of work, but I don't do that work. I just call up a datacenter contractor and tell them how big it needs to be.
Completely different power dynamic though. As an employee, typically your only real power move in an SMB is to leave when asked to do things you should be outsourcing.
-
@flaxking said in New ISP Issues at CEO's Home:
@scottalanmiller said in New ISP Issues at CEO's Home:
It's like if my customer demands that I build them a datacenter. Sure, building a datacenter is a huge amount of work, but I don't do that work. I just call up a datacenter contractor and tell them how big it needs to be.
Completely different power dynamic though. As an employee, typically your only real power move in an SMB is to leave when asked to do things you should be outsourcing.
Not when you get to things that you lack the legal ability to do. Building structures, trenching in right of ways, those things require permits, bonds, insurance, etc.
-
@flaxking said in New ISP Issues at CEO's Home:
I've been sent to the house of a former owner before, so this scenario doesn't surprise me. Sounds like it will give you some good experience anyway.
Us too. We don't do residential work. But, 10% of our revenue is residential work. Why? Because we treat the Owner's/CEO's homes the same their the business.
garak0410's situation is pretty common, really. The owner/CEO knows they chose to build their mansion in the middle of nowhere with no service. They know how to roll with it. You just do what you can and they typically understand.
-
@scottalanmiller said in New ISP Issues at CEO's Home:
@flaxking said in New ISP Issues at CEO's Home:
@scottalanmiller said in New ISP Issues at CEO's Home:
It's like if my customer demands that I build them a datacenter. Sure, building a datacenter is a huge amount of work, but I don't do that work. I just call up a datacenter contractor and tell them how big it needs to be.
Completely different power dynamic though. As an employee, typically your only real power move in an SMB is to leave when asked to do things you should be outsourcing.
Not when you get to things that you lack the legal ability to do. Building structures, trenching in right of ways, those things require permits, bonds, insurance, etc.
If your SMB employer doesn't get permits, and you report them, it's because you're already planning to find a new job.
-
@garak0410 You're doing fine. It sounds like you have access to the property while they are out of town. I would say if you don't get that pepwave re-configured to use the Ethernet wan by Saturday afternoon, I'd get a regular router and make sure he has his internet and WiFi back by the time he rolls in Sunday night..... You got this, just know when to fall back on plan "b".
-
@JasGot said in New ISP Issues at CEO's Home:
@garak0410 You're doing fine. It sounds like you have access to the property while they are out of town. I would say if you don't get that pepwave re-configured to use the Ethernet wan by Saturday afternoon, I'd get a regular router and make sure he has his internet and WiFi back by the time he rolls in Sunday night..... You got this, just know when to fall back on plan "b".
The router arrived today...went ahead with an EdgeMax...trying to figure out where to get started with the config...it has the same default IP ad the Pepwave so I'm thinking I just copy what's in the PEP wave over to ETH0 and in theory, should be a good start.
-
@garak0410 said in New ISP Issues at CEO's Home:
@JasGot said in New ISP Issues at CEO's Home:
@garak0410 You're doing fine. It sounds like you have access to the property while they are out of town. I would say if you don't get that pepwave re-configured to use the Ethernet wan by Saturday afternoon, I'd get a regular router and make sure he has his internet and WiFi back by the time he rolls in Sunday night..... You got this, just know when to fall back on plan "b".
The router arrived today...went ahead with an EdgeMax...trying to figure out where to get started with the config...it has the same default IP ad the Pepwave so I'm thinking I just copy what's in the PEP wave over to ETH0 and in theory, should be a good start.
And forgive me for thinking aloud here but trying to map out how to complete this project...
I was going to leave Eth0 as it is for the connection back to the main network in the house to keep it the same as the PepWave...and using Eth04 for bringing the internet INTO this router...
So, assuming I just need to mirror the PepWave's network info for ETH0, correct?
-
@garak0410 You want the internet connection on eth0 or eth1, those are the two ports that get the ASIC accelerated routing. eth2, eth3 and eth4 are all on a switch that has to use the CPU for routing functions, really slows things down.
-
@travisdh1 said in New ISP Issues at CEO's Home:
@garak0410 You want the internet connection on eth0 or eth1, those are the two ports that get the ASIC accelerated routing. eth2, eth3 and eth4 are all on a switch that has to use the CPU for routing functions, really slows things down.
Interesting- I didn't know that. Cool.
-
@flaxking said in New ISP Issues at CEO's Home:
@IRJ said in New ISP Issues at CEO's Home:
@flaxking said in New ISP Issues at CEO's Home:
I've been sent to the house of a former owner before, so this scenario doesn't surprise me. Sounds like it will give you some good experience anyway.
Experience for what? No business does stuff like this? They dont put a new facility in a location without wired internet access. It just isnt done.
I was referring to standard networking experience. But I guess Canada has third world internet access compared to the US, because there are lots of businesses running with wireless internet, and the percent can be high depending on the industry.
Depends where.... Everyone says that here in NB we were almost world leaders from a telecom perspective before NB Tel turned into Aliant, then Bell Aliant and then Bell Canada....
I think that part of the problem is that we're spread so thin it's hard to justify the infrastructure spend... consider that our whole country has less population than the state of California to put ROI into perspective...
-
I'm on site...
I left it as I had configured, Network on ETH0 and Internet in ETH4 (before I saw the above replies) and so far, it is working...mostly...
Our Milestone camera system isn't working but that may have something to do with the dynamic DNS we have said for that so will verify.
And though it shows we are pulling about 45meg through ViaSat, it still seems a little slow when caching video but once it plays, it stays on...
-
@Dashrender said in New ISP Issues at CEO's Home:
@travisdh1 said in New ISP Issues at CEO's Home:
@garak0410 You want the internet connection on eth0 or eth1, those are the two ports that get the ASIC accelerated routing. eth2, eth3 and eth4 are all on a switch that has to use the CPU for routing functions, really slows things down.
Interesting- I didn't know that. Cool.
Because he’s wrong.
-
@garak0410 said in New ISP Issues at CEO's Home:
I'm on site...
I left it as I had configured, Network on ETH0 and Internet in ETH4 (before I saw the above replies) and so far, it is working...mostly...
Our Milestone camera system isn't working but that may have something to do with the dynamic DNS we have said for that so will verify.
And though it shows we are pulling about 45meg through ViaSat, it still seems a little slow when caching video but once it plays, it stays on...
If you had bothered to do the right thing and run the setup wizard, eth0 would be the WAN.
That is also a PoE input.
Eth4 is PoE output/pass through from eth0.
-
@JaredBusch said in New ISP Issues at CEO's Home:
@garak0410 said in New ISP Issues at CEO's Home:
I'm on site...
I left it as I had configured, Network on ETH0 and Internet in ETH4 (before I saw the above replies) and so far, it is working...mostly...
Our Milestone camera system isn't working but that may have something to do with the dynamic DNS we have said for that so will verify.
And though it shows we are pulling about 45meg through ViaSat, it still seems a little slow when caching video but once it plays, it stays on...
If you had bothered to do the right thing and run the setup wizard, eth0 would be the WAN.
That is also a PoE input.
Eth4 is PoE output/pass through from eth0.
I did follow the wizard and this is the route it took me initially...I'd be more than glad to go back and change it if need be...I'm trying to balance out the demands of the job that now requires me to handle all of work and the CEO's home, SOLO...plus care for my wife who has Leukemia and be able to get my pre-teen daughter to and from appointments and sports...these are the times when I wish I had a second person...don't always need one but the last few weeks, a second person would come in handy for the day to day gremlins...I am looking at SpiceWorld as an escape/vacation here in a few weeks...