For $200 bucks each I could have a little box powered by ethernet or a wall wart that would:

1. Check a URL of your choice for configuration information every few minutes
    (what to ping, what to display etc)

2. Ping or test connectivity every few minutes based on the config in the URL above.

3. Perform a basic speed test and give results to you or to the end user every X minutes/hours.

4. Provide you, the service owner with details of the above for metrics.

Let me know if y'all want something like this and can put $ forth.

ryan


On 11/20/14 12:49 PM, Sterling Jacobson via Af wrote:
BUT, the phones now days are smart enough to know when wifi sucks or goes out 
completely.

They fall back to 3/4G.

Which is awesome, because it could still talk to the service provider end and 
tell the customer the status.

I think this would work better than a green/red light.

The phone App would tell you that your service is correct to the house, but 
that inside it's not talking.
Then walk the customer through a set of standard fix it routines.

That would solve most of our calls right there.

On the back end it just needs to talk to a server process that can get access 
to the device on the side of the house.

The best would be an embedded speed test in the ONT/CPE that could report back 
to the App and say they are getting what they are paying for to the side of 
their house. And then give them suggestions for fixing their crappy wifi.

I bet it wouldn't take much to get this done and working with a few larger 
billing systems and equipment platforms, who's with me??

-----Original Message-----
From: Af [mailto:af-boun...@afmug.com] On Behalf Of Ken Hohhof via Af
Sent: Thursday, November 20, 2014 12:35 PM
To: af@afmug.com
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Network Monitoring in the 2010's

Part of the problem is so many customers are 100% WiFi now, so unless you have 
a managed router there, you have 2 big problem areas beyond the demarc - the 
customer's router and the customer's WiFi.


-----Original Message-----
From: Bill Prince via Af
Sent: Thursday, November 20, 2014 1:04 PM
To: af@afmug.com
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Network Monitoring in the 2010's

Linktechs built a tool a couple years ago that ran on the customer's PC (WIndows only) 
that would give the customer a "connection health"
indication.  It would monitor the local gateway, and give both a green light 
for connected, plus a reading on the latency.  You go too much beyond that, and 
you will get a bunch of false positives when something beyond your local 
network is having some kind of issue (we get our share of these).

I don't think they got much response from it, and I don't think they offer it 
any longer.

bp
<part-15@SkylineBroadbandService>

On 11/20/2014 9:43 AM, Sterling Jacobson via Af wrote:
What I really want is an integrated system that isn't stuck in the 90's.

I want the customer to have an app on their phone that tells them when
their network is having issues and why.
I want it to also remind them to pay their bill and provide a
lazy/easy way to do that.

I want that same system to have an engineer app that tells us when
nodes fail and why.

So if a node goes down and it's important, it should show up on my
phone and I can take action.
One of those actions would be to message to outage impacted customers
the ETA to fix etc.

Emails from Cacti don't count.



--
D. Ryan Spott | Iron Goat Networks, llc
broadband | telco | colo | community
PO Box 1232 / 603 W. Stevens Sultan, WA 98284
360-799-0552 | gtalk: rsp...@irongoat.net

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