Router/firewall recommendations for small branch office
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@stacksofplates said in Router/firewall recommendations for small branch office:
Edit: I just saw a reddit post about an update to the USG line so I'm guessing not.
I've been looking for some inside info on that, got a link?
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I disagree with EdgeRouters. I think Mikrotik has better routing and switching performance.
Just my experience .
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@bholler said in Router/firewall recommendations for small branch office:
I disagree with EdgeRouters. I think Mikrotik has better routing and switching performance.
Just my experience .
I like both, for sure. No issue with Mikrotik. But overall I'm generally preferring EdgeRouter for customers, I like the monitoring better and the hardware.
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@Romo said in Router/firewall recommendations for small branch office:
@scottalanmiller https://community.ui.com/questions/Introducing-the-UniFi-Next-Gen-Gateway-Product-Line-Starting-with-UXG-Pro-/732dd4dd-10bf-463c-8622-382d77702872
Available in Early Access for $499, not had. This is the replacement for the Pro, no announce USG replacement yet. But this is a good start.
Moving from EdgeOS to UnifiOS and from MIPS to ARM.
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@scottalanmiller said in Router/firewall recommendations for small branch office:
Moving from EdgeOS to UnifiOS
Having it be customized EdgeOS made the original USG a total piece of trash.
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@JaredBusch said in Router/firewall recommendations for small branch office:
If you network is down to outside factors you don’t get in trouble for 911 calls not completing. That has never been a thing. POTS goes down all the time.
In theory POTS is more reliable for 911 address lookup. In reality if I'm calling 911 in an office it's likely going to be from my cell phone assuming service.
Nothing stops you from getting a SIM card modem backup for the PBX, or for IP using a SD-WAN solution that bridges in cellular networks to cover normal circuit outages.
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@StorageNinja said in Router/firewall recommendations for small branch office:
In theory POTS is more reliable for 911 address lookup.
Completely not true. POTS is not any different, except the carrier does not let you specify the address for a phone number in a convenient portal. Instead it is your billing address unless you go outside of default.
But the carrier is simply updating the PSAP database, no different than what happens when you certify and address to a DID with your SIP provider.
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@StorageNinja said in Router/firewall recommendations for small branch office:
Nothing stops you from getting a SIM card modem backup for the PBX, or for IP using a SD-WAN solution that bridges in cellular networks to cover normal circuit outages.
There are lots of mitigations that one can do. But they are not required by law.
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@scottalanmiller said in Router/firewall recommendations for small branch office:
@stacksofplates said in Router/firewall recommendations for small branch office:
Are you talking about the dream machine?
I sure hope not, that thing seems so dumb.
I can see the benefits for some people. It will also do IPS with full gig passthrough.
If I was running their cameras it would def be a plus to have the nvr and everything in the same rack unit. -
@scottalanmiller said in Router/firewall recommendations for small branch office:
@stacksofplates said in Router/firewall recommendations for small branch office:
Edit: I just saw a reddit post about an update to the USG line so I'm guessing not.
I've been looking for some inside info on that, got a link?
It was just sometime that said there's an update. There wasn't any information
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@stacksofplates said in Router/firewall recommendations for small branch office:
If I was running their cameras it would def be a plus to have the nvr and everything in the same rack unit.
That goes against most of the recommendations we see around here. Not that I disagree with you.
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@StorageNinja said in Router/firewall recommendations for small branch office:
In theory POTS is more reliable for 911 address lookup. In reality if I'm calling 911 in an office it's likely going to be from my cell phone assuming service.
Only a theory. You hook POTS to VoIP, like everyone does today, and suddenly it's 100% wrong and impossible to fix. POTS only works under very specific conditions and using it as the tech behind any business phone system means it doesn't do 911 properly and unlikely phone systems for the last 20 years, has no means of addressing it.
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@JaredBusch said in Router/firewall recommendations for small branch office:
Completely not true. POTS is not any different, except the carrier does not let you specify the address for a phone number in a convenient portal. Instead it is your billing address unless you go outside of default.
Yeah, I have loads of customers that still have POTS, but connect to the phone from random locations via an app on their cell phones. So the system claims that they are in one location, because of the POTS line, and doesn't give any way for the emergency services to know that it's somewhere else or might be somewhere else.
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@stacksofplates said in Router/firewall recommendations for small branch office:
@scottalanmiller said in Router/firewall recommendations for small branch office:
@stacksofplates said in Router/firewall recommendations for small branch office:
Are you talking about the dream machine?
I sure hope not, that thing seems so dumb.
I can see the benefits for some people. It will also do IPS with full gig passthrough.
If I was running their cameras it would def be a plus to have the nvr and everything in the same rack unit.The speed is nice, but I sure don't want NVR or the controller in my router. It's crazy. It's like a cheesy consumer unit, in a rack form factor.
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@scottalanmiller said in Router/firewall recommendations for small branch office:
@stacksofplates said in Router/firewall recommendations for small branch office:
@scottalanmiller said in Router/firewall recommendations for small branch office:
@stacksofplates said in Router/firewall recommendations for small branch office:
Are you talking about the dream machine?
I sure hope not, that thing seems so dumb.
I can see the benefits for some people. It will also do IPS with full gig passthrough.
If I was running their cameras it would def be a plus to have the nvr and everything in the same rack unit.The speed is nice, but I sure don't want NVR or the controller in my router. It's crazy. It's like a cheesy consumer unit, in a rack form factor.
I guess I don't really see the downsides but that's fine.
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@stacksofplates said in Router/firewall recommendations for small branch office:
@scottalanmiller said in Router/firewall recommendations for small branch office:
@stacksofplates said in Router/firewall recommendations for small branch office:
@scottalanmiller said in Router/firewall recommendations for small branch office:
@stacksofplates said in Router/firewall recommendations for small branch office:
Are you talking about the dream machine?
I sure hope not, that thing seems so dumb.
I can see the benefits for some people. It will also do IPS with full gig passthrough.
If I was running their cameras it would def be a plus to have the nvr and everything in the same rack unit.The speed is nice, but I sure don't want NVR or the controller in my router. It's crazy. It's like a cheesy consumer unit, in a rack form factor.
I guess I don't really see the downsides but that's fine.
Well, lacking the option of central management is huge. Who buys gear that large and is not just a single location, but designing around staying a single location? Someone, somewhere, but it's so niche.
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@scottalanmiller said in Router/firewall recommendations for small branch office:
@stacksofplates said in Router/firewall recommendations for small branch office:
@scottalanmiller said in Router/firewall recommendations for small branch office:
@stacksofplates said in Router/firewall recommendations for small branch office:
@scottalanmiller said in Router/firewall recommendations for small branch office:
@stacksofplates said in Router/firewall recommendations for small branch office:
Are you talking about the dream machine?
I sure hope not, that thing seems so dumb.
I can see the benefits for some people. It will also do IPS with full gig passthrough.
If I was running their cameras it would def be a plus to have the nvr and everything in the same rack unit.The speed is nice, but I sure don't want NVR or the controller in my router. It's crazy. It's like a cheesy consumer unit, in a rack form factor.
I guess I don't really see the downsides but that's fine.
Well, lacking the option of central management is huge. Who buys gear that large and is not just a single location, but designing around staying a single location? Someone, somewhere, but it's so niche.
Tons of businesses grow, sure, and they just install new camera systems at each location - perhaps that's not the best solution, but it's what they do. The pharmacy I recently assisted - new location, whole new onsite camera system, nothing centralized about it.
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@Dashrender said in Router/firewall recommendations for small branch office:
@scottalanmiller said in Router/firewall recommendations for small branch office:
@stacksofplates said in Router/firewall recommendations for small branch office:
@scottalanmiller said in Router/firewall recommendations for small branch office:
@stacksofplates said in Router/firewall recommendations for small branch office:
@scottalanmiller said in Router/firewall recommendations for small branch office:
@stacksofplates said in Router/firewall recommendations for small branch office:
Are you talking about the dream machine?
I sure hope not, that thing seems so dumb.
I can see the benefits for some people. It will also do IPS with full gig passthrough.
If I was running their cameras it would def be a plus to have the nvr and everything in the same rack unit.The speed is nice, but I sure don't want NVR or the controller in my router. It's crazy. It's like a cheesy consumer unit, in a rack form factor.
I guess I don't really see the downsides but that's fine.
Well, lacking the option of central management is huge. Who buys gear that large and is not just a single location, but designing around staying a single location? Someone, somewhere, but it's so niche.
Tons of businesses grow, sure, and they just install new camera systems at each location - perhaps that's not the best solution, but it's what they do. The pharmacy I recently assisted - new location, whole new onsite camera system, nothing centralized about it.
That's the DVR< that's the trivial part of this. I still think that that is bad, because you tie completely unnecessary things together in inflexible ways. But my point is that the controller being forced to one location is a huge problem. How do you manage multiple dream machines?
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@scottalanmiller said in Router/firewall recommendations for small branch office:
@stacksofplates said in Router/firewall recommendations for small branch office:
@scottalanmiller said in Router/firewall recommendations for small branch office:
@stacksofplates said in Router/firewall recommendations for small branch office:
@scottalanmiller said in Router/firewall recommendations for small branch office:
@stacksofplates said in Router/firewall recommendations for small branch office:
Are you talking about the dream machine?
I sure hope not, that thing seems so dumb.
I can see the benefits for some people. It will also do IPS with full gig passthrough.
If I was running their cameras it would def be a plus to have the nvr and everything in the same rack unit.The speed is nice, but I sure don't want NVR or the controller in my router. It's crazy. It's like a cheesy consumer unit, in a rack form factor.
I guess I don't really see the downsides but that's fine.
Well, lacking the option of central management is huge. Who buys gear that large and is not just a single location, but designing around staying a single location? Someone, somewhere, but it's so niche.
It's a $380 router with an 8 port switch and NVR. I don't think anyone bigger than a single location would look at it.
The NVR by itself is $300.
It doesn't support CLI access so it's more of a prosumer/small office setup.
The NVR is enough to make me want it. Until this year I don't believe their NVR software was available past Ubuntu 14.04 (it may have been 16.04 but I don't think)