What's your favorite brand for network gear?
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I currently have both Ubiquity and TP-Link products, and I am very happy with them.
What's your favorite brand for network gear? Why?
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I've always had good luck with the HP Procurve line of switches for business class stuff... For home, I've had relatively good luck with Linksys stuff. I'm looking to switch to an ERL or ERX soon-ish.
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I've had HP switches for 10+ years. They haven't given me any issues. Ubiquiti is what I'm looking toward for replacement APs.
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Starting my journey with Extreme - so far, I am impressed.
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Used HP earlier, but also Cisco, EnteraSys (now part of Extreme Networks), Nortel Networks, 3Com (before they were bought by HP) and Juniper. Like Juniper the most, clean and great management interface and FreeBSD behind the scenes.
Huawei made some interesting offers lately, for example the CloudEngine 6800 series CE6810-32T16S4Q TOR switch. They are quite cheap and Huawei got great knowledge in that field from their telco and T1/Backbone background.
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I'm a big fan of Netgear for SMB applications.
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Used and preferred HP ProCurve. Just purchased the first EdgeSwitch from Ubiquiti. not tried anything complicated with it yet.
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@thwr said in What's your favorite brand for network gear?:
Huawei made some interesting offers lately, for example the CloudEngine 6800 series CE6810-32T16S4Q TOR switch. They are quite cheap and Huawei got great knowledge in that field from their telco and T1/Backbone background.
Can't get Huawei anything in the US (without some real effort.) They are a huge global brand but avoid the US market.
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Ubiquiti and Netgear ProSafe mostly. Juniper is nice when required.
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HP Procurve, Palo Alto & Cisco
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Mostly Netgear and TPLink but looking at Ubiquiti as replacements when needed/required.
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@scottalanmiller said:
Can't get Huawei anything in the US (without some real effort.) They are a huge global brand but avoid the US market.
Here is why:
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Huawei could solve this by making their platform completely open. Basically only sell hardware and allow others to make their own firmware/software that runs on it.
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@Dashrender said in What's your favorite brand for network gear?:
Huawei could solve this by making their platform completely open. Basically only sell hardware and allow others to make their own firmware/software that runs on it.
Who would buy it then? Useless hardware without vertical support? What business would use that? That's the DD-WRT model. Great for hobbyists, but that's not what they are going for. They want business usage.
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You can buy a lot of Huawei cell phones over here. I used to have a few android phones from them back in the day. They were all crappy made stuff.
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@scottalanmiller said in What's your favorite brand for network gear?:
@Dashrender said in What's your favorite brand for network gear?:
Huawei could solve this by making their platform completely open. Basically only sell hardware and allow others to make their own firmware/software that runs on it.
Who would buy it then? Useless hardware without vertical support? What business would use that? That's the DD-WRT model. Great for hobbyists, but that's not what they are going for. They want business usage.
Well the hope would be that the FOSS environment would make awesome firmware for it, than you could KNOW didn't have a back doors.
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@Jason said in What's your favorite brand for network gear?:
You can buy a lot of Huawei cell phones over here. I used to have a few android phones from them back in the day. They were all crappy made stuff.
The latest 6P is made by them. Haven't used one but it seems to be well accepted.
I've also seen other phones that were made by them but rebranded.
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@Dashrender said in What's your favorite brand for network gear?:
@scottalanmiller said in What's your favorite brand for network gear?:
@Dashrender said in What's your favorite brand for network gear?:
Huawei could solve this by making their platform completely open. Basically only sell hardware and allow others to make their own firmware/software that runs on it.
Who would buy it then? Useless hardware without vertical support? What business would use that? That's the DD-WRT model. Great for hobbyists, but that's not what they are going for. They want business usage.
Well the hope would be that the FOSS environment would make awesome firmware for it, than you could KNOW didn't have a back doors.
Hardware itself can have backdoors
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@Jason said in What's your favorite brand for network gear?:
@Dashrender said in What's your favorite brand for network gear?:
@scottalanmiller said in What's your favorite brand for network gear?:
@Dashrender said in What's your favorite brand for network gear?:
Huawei could solve this by making their platform completely open. Basically only sell hardware and allow others to make their own firmware/software that runs on it.
Who would buy it then? Useless hardware without vertical support? What business would use that? That's the DD-WRT model. Great for hobbyists, but that's not what they are going for. They want business usage.
Well the hope would be that the FOSS environment would make awesome firmware for it, than you could KNOW didn't have a back doors.
Hardware itself can have backdoors
yeah - you have a point there.
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@Dashrender said in What's your favorite brand for network gear?:
@Jason said in What's your favorite brand for network gear?:
@Dashrender said in What's your favorite brand for network gear?:
@scottalanmiller said in What's your favorite brand for network gear?:
@Dashrender said in What's your favorite brand for network gear?:
Huawei could solve this by making their platform completely open. Basically only sell hardware and allow others to make their own firmware/software that runs on it.
Who would buy it then? Useless hardware without vertical support? What business would use that? That's the DD-WRT model. Great for hobbyists, but that's not what they are going for. They want business usage.
Well the hope would be that the FOSS environment would make awesome firmware for it, than you could KNOW didn't have a back doors.
Hardware itself can have backdoors
yeah - you have a point there.
Yes like most things that go through any US customs anywhere.